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| The '''Iraq War''' was the invasion of [[Iraq]] in 2003 by a multinational coalition led by the [[United States of America]]. Military operations were conducted by forces from the U.S., the [[United Kingdom]], [[Australia]] and [[Poland]], and was supported in various ways by many other countries, some of which allowed attacks to be launched or controlled from their territory. The U.N. neither approved nor censured the war, which was never a formally declared war. The U.S. refers to it as [[Operation IRAQI FREEDOM]]. Continuing operations are under the command of [[Multi-National Force-Iraq]].
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| This war is to be distinguished from the [[Gulf War]] of 1991, following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The Gulf War had United Nations authorization. Further, both these wars should be differentiated from the [[Iran-Iraq War]] of 1980-1988.
| | The '''Iraq War''' was the invasion of Iraq in 2003 by a multinational coalition led by the United States of America. Military operations were conducted by forces from the U.S., the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland, and was supported in various ways by many other countries, some of which allowed attacks to be launched or controlled from their territory. The United Nations neither approved nor censured the invasion, which was never a formally declared a war. The U.S. refers to it as Operation Iraqi Freedom. Continuing operations are under the command of Multi-National Force-Iraq. |
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| The war had quick result of the removal (and later execution) of Iraqi dictator [[Saddam Hussein]] and the formation of a democratically elected parliament and ratified constitution, which won UN approval. However, an amorphous [[insurgency]] since then has produced large numbers of civilian deaths and an unstable Iraqi government. It has generated enormous political controversy in the U.S. and other countries. | | From the U.S. operational view, Operation Iraqi Freedom ended when the 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, the last operational brigade in Iraq, left in August 2010. <ref>{{citation |
| | | title = Operation Iraqi Freedom ends as last combat soldiers leave Baghdad |
| | | author = Ernesto Londoño |
| | | journal = Washington Post |
| | | date = 19 August 2010 |
| | | url =http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/18/AR2010081805644_pf.html |
| | }}</ref> Six other brigades actually remain, but they are called "advise and assist" units charged with training. |
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| | This war is to be distinguished from the Gulf War of 1991, following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The Gulf War had United Nations authorization. Further, both these wars should be differentiated from the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-1988. |
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| | The war had quick result of the removal (and later execution) of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and the formation of a democratically elected parliament and ratified constitution, which won UN approval. However, an amorphous insurgency since then has produced large numbers of civilian deaths and an unstable Iraqi government. It has generated enormous political controversy in the U.S. and other countries. |
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| | It also changed the dynamics of the region. According to Anthony Zinni, <ref>Presentation at the Brookings Institution National Security Seminar, November 2001, as recorded by David Kilcullen</ref>, it produced the "first Shi'a Arab state in modern history." Earlier advocates of regime change in Iraq, such as David Wurmser, had proposed replacing Saddam Hussein with a government of Iraqi exiles centered around Ahmed Chalabi; such a government would be in close alliance with Jordan.<ref name=Tyranny>{{citation |
| | | url = http://www.aei.org/docLib/20021130_40748.pdf |
| | | title = Tyranny's Ally: America's Failure to Defeat Saddam Hussein |
| | | publisher = American Enterprise Institute |
| | | year = 1999 | author = David Wurmser |
| | }}, p. 80</ref> There have been constant questions of Iraq splitting along the ethnic and religious lines of the three Ottoman Empire provinces from which the British Empire created it: Shi'a, Sunni, and Kurd. |
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| | Sovereignty has been transferred to a new elected Iraqi government, with U.S. forces withdrawn from the cities. Security problems still exist, although they are reduced from the worst times of the insurgency. |
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| | {{seealso|Iraq War, origins of invasion}} |
| | {{seealso|Iraq War, major combat phase}} |
| | {{seealso|Iraq War, Surge}} |
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| | ==Rationale== |
| | There had been some sentiment, in the 1991 Gulf War, that the invasion force should have continued to Baghdad and overthrown Saddam Hussein, but most agree that would have been far beyond the UN mandate and the realities of the coalition. Nevertheless, there was increasingly strong pressure among American policy influencers, from the mid-1990s on, that regime change in Iraq was important to the overall goals of American foreign policy. The 1998 Iraq Liberation Act formalized this as a Congressional statement of direction. |
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| The main rationale for the invasion was Iraq’s continued violation of the 1991 agreement (in particular United Nations Resolution 687) that the country allow UN weapons inspectors unhindered access to nuclear facilities, as well as the country’s failure to observe several UN resolutions ordering Iraq to comply with Resolution 687. The US government cited intelligence reports that Iraq was actively supporting terrorists and developing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) as additional and acute reasons to invade. Though there was some justification before October 2002 for believing this intelligence credible, a later Senate investigation found that the intelligence was inaccurate and that the intelligence community failed to communicate this properly to the Bush administration<ref>{{citation | | The main rationale for the invasion was Iraq’s continued violation of the 1991 agreement (in particular United Nations Resolution 687) that the country allow UN weapons inspectors unhindered access to nuclear facilities, as well as the country’s failure to observe several UN resolutions ordering Iraq to comply with Resolution 687. The US government cited intelligence reports that Iraq was actively supporting terrorists and developing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) as additional and acute reasons to invade. Though there was some justification before October 2002 for believing this intelligence credible, a later Senate investigation found that the intelligence was inaccurate and that the intelligence community failed to communicate this properly to the Bush administration<ref>{{citation |
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| ==Factors Leading Up to the Invasion== | | ==Factors Leading Up to the Invasion== |
| There were a wide range of opinions that Saddam Hussein's Iraq had a negative effect on regional and world stability, although many of the opinionmakers intensely disagreed on the ways in which it was destabilizing. This idea certainly did not begin with 9/11. | | {{main|Iraq War, origins of invasion}} |
| | There was wide support for the view that Saddam Hussein's Iraq had a negative effect on regional and world stability, although many of the opinion makers intensely disagreed on the ways in which it was destabilizing. This idea certainly did not begin with 9/11, but 9/11 intensified the concern in the Bush Administration.<ref name=Feith-War>{{citation |
| | | title = War and Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terrorism |
| | | author = Douglas J. Feith |
| | | publisher = Harper | year = 2008 | isbn = 9780060899738}}, pp. 215-216</ref> Nevertheless, U.S. military action against Iraq goes back to unconventional warfare during the Iran-Iraq War under Ronald Reagan, the Gulf War under George W. Bush and various operations under Bill Clinton. |
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| | Iraq had had and used chemical weapons in the Iran-Iraq War and had active missile, biological weapon and nuclear weapon development programs. These provided Saddam with both a means of threatening and deterring within the region. He also supported regional terrorists, but there is now little evidence he had operational control of terrorists acting outside the region. Saddam had attempted an assassination of former President George H. W. Bush. |
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| Iraq had had and used [[chemical weapon]]s in the [[Iran-Iraq War]] and had active missile, [[biological weapon]] and [[nuclear weapon]] development programs. These provided Saddam with both a means of threatening and deterring within the region.
| | The issue of non-national terrorism, however, took on new intensity after the 9/11 attack. Some analysts, such as Michael Scheuer, believe that many decision makers found it hard to accept that such an attack could come from other than a nation-state. |
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| He also supported regional terrorists, but there is now little evidence he had operational control of terrorists acting outside the region. Saddam had attempted an assassination of former President [[George H. W. Bush]].
| | The Authorization for the Use of Military Force that gave the George W. Bush Administration its legal authority to attack Iraq did not specifically depend on a proven relationship between Iraq and 9-11, or a specific WMD threat to the United States. Both, however, were assumed. |
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| The issue of non-national terrorism, however, took on new intensity after the [[9-11 attack]].
| | ==Strategic preparation== |
| | ''Not all the planning dates may seem in proper sequence; this is not anything suspicious as some of the work was already in progress as part of routine staff activity, while other work was started by informal communications.'' |
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| The [[Authorization for the Use of Military Force]] that gave the [[George W. Bush Administration]] its legal authority to attack Iraq did not specifically depend on a proven relationship between Iraq and 9-11, or a specific WMD threat to the United States. Both, however, were assumed.
| | Even before the 9/11 attacks, regime change in Saddam Hussein's Iraq was a high priority of the George W. Bush Administration. According to This is not to suggest that previous Administrations had not been considering it, and had been steadily carrying out air attacks in support of the no-fly zones (Operation SOUTHERN WATCH and Operation NORTHERN WATCH), as well as air strikes (Operation DESERT FOX). Nevertheless, the priorities changed. |
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| ===Clinton Administration===
| | In part using the cover of the no-fly zones, in part using clandestine operations, and in part activities in areas outside Iraq, work proceeded in what is now termed Operational Preparation of the Environment. This includes Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace, Operational Preparation of the Battlespace, and logistics (military)|logistical and other combat support and combat service support. |
| {{main|Iraq and weapons of mass destruction}}
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| After the [[Gulf War]] in 1991, United Nations Resolution 687 specified that Iraq must destroy all weapons of mass destruction (WMD). A large amount of WMDs were indeed destroyed under UN supervision ([[UNSCOM]]). Two no-fly zones were also instituted in northern and southern Iraq where Iraqi military aircraft were prohibited from flying. The United States and the United Kingdom (and [[France]] until 1998) patrolled these zones in, respectively, [[Operation NORTHERN WATCH]] and [[Operation SOUTHERN WATCH]].
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| According to Richard Clarke, the U.S. found a press report, in April 1993, of an attempt, by the Iraqi intelligence service, to assassinate former President [[George H. W. Bush]] while he was visiting Kuwait.<ref name=Clarke>{{citation
| | Another change, in the Bush Administration, was an emphasis on not "fighting the last war". Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was a constant advocate of transformation, emphasizing higher technology, more flexibility, and smaller forces, rather than the large heavy forces that were optimized to fight the Soviet Union. This was especially true after early operations in the Afghanistan War (2001-2021), where large U.S. ground forces were not used, but instead extensive special operations working with Afghan forces and using air power. Every war is different, however, and the reality in Afghanistan is there was an existing civil war and substantial indigenous resistance forces. |
| | ===Assumed links between 9/11 and Iraq=== |
| | Late in the evening of 9/11, the President had been told, by CIA chief George Tenet, that there was strong linkage to al-Qaeda and the 9/11 attack proper. Tenet did not discuss Iraq in this context. <ref name=Tenet>{{citation |
| | | author = George Tenet with Bill Harlow |
| | | title = At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA |
| | | publisher = Harpercollins| year = 2007 | isbn = 9780061147784}}, p. 169</ref> On September 12, President Bush directed counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke to review all information and reconsider if Saddam was involved in 9/11.<ref name=Clarke>{{citation |
| | title = Against all Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror | | | title = Against all Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror |
| | author = Richard A. Clarke | | | author = Richard Clarke |
| | publisher = Free Press, Simon & Schuster | year = 2004 | | | publisher = Free Press, Simon & Schuster | year = 2004 |
| | isbn = 0743260244 | | | isbn = 0743260244 |
| }}, pp. 80-84</ref> After confirmation by the CIA and FBI, a retaliatory missile strike was delivered in June of that year.<ref name=CRS>{{citation | | }}, p. 31</ref> |
| | title = Iraqi Challenges and U.S. Responses: March 1991 through October 2002
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| | date = November 20, 2002
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| | author = Alfred B. Prados
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| | publisher = Congressional Research Service
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| | url = http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/crs/rl31641.pdf
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| }}</ref> Searches of the records of the Iraqi service after 2003 did not provide hard evidence of such a plot, but reporter Michael Isikoff, often skeptical about U.S claims about Iraq, agreed the records might have been destroyed. <ref name=Newsweek>{{citation
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| | title = Saddam’s Files: They show terror plots, but raise new questions about some U.S. claims.
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| | author = Michael Isikoff | journal = Newsweek
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| | date = March 31, 2008
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| | url = http://www.newsweek.com/id/128620}}</ref>
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| The [[1996 Khobar Towers bombing]] attacked forces, in Saudi Arabia, conducting SOUTHERN WATCH. This attack, however, appears to have been sponsored by Iran.
| | Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz sent Rumsfeld a memo, on September 17, called "Preventing More Events"; it argued that there was a better than 1 in 10 chance that Saddam was behind 9/11. <ref name=Isikoff>{{citation |
| | | | title = HUBRIS: the Inside Story of Spin, Scandal and the Selling of the Iraq War |
| However, by late 1997, the the [[Bill Clinton|Clinton administration]] became dissatisfied with Iraq’s increased unwillingness to cooperate with UNSCOM inspectors.
| | | author = Michael Isikoff, David Corn |
| As a result of widespread expectations that the Clinton administration would decide to act with military force, the UN weapons inspectors were evacuated from the country. Iraq and the United Nations agreed to resume weapons inspections, but Saddam Hussein continued to obstruct UNSCOM teams throughout the remainder of 1998.
| | | publisher = Crown/Random house | year = 2006 | isbn = 0307346811}}, p. 80</ref> He had been told, by the CIA and FBI, that there was clear linkage to al-Qaeda, but said the CIA lacked imagination. <ref>Isikoff and Corn, p. 108</ref> On September 19, 2001, the Defense Advisory Board, chaired by Richard Perle, met for two days. Iraq was the focus. Among the speakers was Ahmed Chalabi, a controversial Iraqi exile who argued for an approach similar to the not-yet-executed approach to Afghanistan: U.S. air and other support to insurgent Iraqis. <ref name=COBRA>{{citation |
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| Congress passed the [[Iraq Liberation Act]] in October 1998: <blockquote>It should be the policy of the United States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq and to promote the emergence of a democratic government to replace that regime. <ref>{{citation
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| | url = http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/iraq/libact103198.pdf | |
| | title = Iraq Liberation Act of 1998}}</ref></blockquote> | |
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| In December 1998, President Clinton authorized military action against Iraq. Between December 16 and 19, 1998, US and UK missiles and aircraft attcked military and government targets in Iraq in [[Operation DESERT FOX]]. It was widely understood that the Clinton administration intended Operation Desert Fox to be not merely a campaign of punishment for Iraq’s failure to cooperate but also to weaken the regime in advance of orchestrated efforts to cause regime change. In that respect, Clinton administration policy was ineffective.
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| As a result of Iraq’s barring inspectors from the country, UNSCOM inspections of Iraq’s WMD effectively came to an end and in March 1999, the UN concluded that the UNSCOM mandate should end. In December 1999, the UN passed UN Security Council Resolution 1284, setting up [[UNMOVIC]] (United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission), headed by Swedish diplomat Hans Blix, which was to identify the remaining WMD arsenals in Iraq. Because UNMOVIC was banned from Iraq, the world had to rely on indirect evidence, most of which turned out to be false or inaccurate.<ref>Ali A. Allawi. ''The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace''. New Haven (Conn.): Yale University Press, 2007, p. 72.</ref> Iraq policy during the remainder of the Clinton presidency was marked by a return to the containment regime that existed before Operation Desert Fox, but now without the benefit of direct intelligence.
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| ===Bush Administration Policy===
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| ====Policy before 9/11 Attacks====
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| In the early days of the Bush administration, President George W. Bush expressed dissatisfaction with his predecessor’s foreign policy, in particular with regard to Iraq, which he considered weak and half-hearted. When Bush and Clinton met in the days of transition, on December 19, 2000, Clinton said that his understanding of Bush's priorities, from reading his campaign statements, were [[ballistic missile defense|national missile defense]] and Iraq. Bush said that was correct. Clinton suggested Bush consider other priorities, including [[al-Qaeda]], Middle East diplomacy, North Korea, the nuclear competition between India and Pakistan, and, only then, Iraq. Bush did not respond. <ref name=COBRA>{{citation
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| | title = COBRA II: the inside story of the invasion and occupation of Iraq | | | title = COBRA II: the inside story of the invasion and occupation of Iraq |
| | author = Michael R. Gordon, Bernard E. Trainor | | | author = Michael R. Gordon, Bernard E. Trainor |
| | publisher = Pantheon | year = 2006 | isbn = 0375422625}}, p. 14</ref> | | | publisher = Pantheon | year = 2006 | isbn = 0375422625}}, p. 27</ref> Chalabi had the greatest support among Republican-identified neoconservatives, but also had Democratic supporters such as former Director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey.<ref name=NYorker2003-05-12>{{citation |
| | | | url = http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2003/05/12/030512fa_fact?currentPage=all |
| During the campaign, Bush had criticized President Clinton as too widely engaged in too many conflicts, acting as the “world’s policeman.” In the end, President Bush believed Clinton had lacked the necessary resolve to hold Saddam Hussein accountable for his failure to comply with UN resolutions. Bush also questioned America’s membership in NATO and involvement in UN diplomacy, which led some to believe he was moving towards a more isolationist view of foreign policy.<ref>Cameron G. Thies. “From Containment to the Bush Doctrine: The Road to War with Iraq.” In: John Davis ed. ''Presidential Policies and the Road to the Second Iraq War''. Aldershot (UK)/Burlington (VT):Ashgate, 193-207, here p. 200.</ref>
| | | author = Seymour Hersh |
| | | | journal = New Yorker |
| At the same time, Bush continued to favor executing the policy President Clinton had approved but not acted on: to actively proceed to effect regime change in Iraq. In January 2002, [[Time Magazine]] reported that since President Bush took office he had been grumbling about finishing the job his father started. <ref>http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,235395,00.html Time Magazine reports</ref>
| | | title = Annals of National Security, Selective Intelligence: Donald Rumsfeld has his own special sources. Are they reliable? |
| | | | date = May 12, 2003}}</ref> |
| On February 16, 2001 a number of US and UK warplanes attacked Baghdad, nearly two years before the start of the Iraq war. <ref>http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/meast/02/16/iraq.airstrike/ CNN reports</ref>.
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| ====Iraqi WMD and the War on Terror ====
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| The attacks of September 11, 2001 shaped the policies of the Bush administration towards Iraq. President Bush saw them as confirmation of his beliefs that the international community’s failure to enforce compliance with UN resolution and America’s irresolute foreign policy had emboldened rogue states and international terrorist groups. Because Iraq was known to have had and used WMD in the past and because Iraq had blocked UN supervision of the destruction of its WMD, there remained great uncertainty about Iraq’s WMD arsenal. The Bush administration made Iraq of central importance to its national security policy. Combined with his isolationist foreign policy beliefs, President Bush started to formulate what has become known as the [[Bush Doctrine]]. The doctrine is most fully expressed in the administration’s ''National Security Strategy of the United States of America'', published in September 2002. In it, the President states:
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| <blockquote>We will disrupt and destroy terrorist organizations by (…) direct and continuous action using all the elements of national and international power. Our immediate focus will be those terrorist organizations of global reach and any terrorist or state sponsor of terrorism which attempts to gain or use weapons of mass destruction (WMD) or their precursors.<ref>[http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss3.html ''National Security Strategy of the United States of America''], The White House, September 2002. (Page 6 in the printed edition). Retrieved May 8, 2008.</ref></blockquote>
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| The administration included Iraq in a series of states it considered acutely dangerous to world peace. In his 2002 [[State of the Union]] President Bush called Iraq part of an “axis of evil” together with [[Iran]] and [[North Korea]].<ref>[http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/01/20020129-11.html 2002 State of the Union address], President George W. Bush, January 29, 2002. Retrieved May 8, 2008.</ref> In this address the president also claimed the right to wage a [[preventive attack|preventive war]], as distinct from a [[preemptive attack]]. Early in 2002, the administration began pressuring Iraq as well as the international community on greater compliance by Iraq with UN resolutions.
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| Not all the senior officials of the administration treated attacking Iraq as a high priority. Some believed there was no case, while others felt that Afghanistan needed a higher priority. While [[Colin Powell]] eventually argued for Iraqi WMD before the United Nations, he and his deputy, [[Richard Armitage]], internally raised questions. Senators [[Joe Biden]], [[Richard Lugar]], and [[Chuck Hagel]] were drafting legislation to limit Bush's authority; Biden said he was getting support from Powell and Armitage. <ref name=Isikoff>{{citation
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| | title = HUBRIS: the Inside Story of Spin, Scandal and the Selling of the Iraq War | |
| | author = Michael Isikoff, David Corn | |
| | publisher = Crown/Random house | year = 2006 | isbn = 0307346811}}, p. 127</ref> | |
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| ==Strategic planning==
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| ''Not all the planning dates may seem in proper sequence; this is not anything suspicious as some of the work was already in progress as part of routine staff activity, while other work was started by informal communications.''
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| Even before the [[9-11 attack]]s, regime change in [[Saddam Hussein]]'s Iraq was a high priority of the [[George W. Bush Administration]]. According to This is not to suggest that previous Administrations had not been considering it, and had been steadily carrying out air attacks in support of the no-fly zones ([[Operation SOUTHERN WATCH]] and [[Operation NORTHERN WATCH]]), as well as air strikes ([[Operation DESERT FOX]]). Nevertheless, the priorities changed.
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| Another change, in the Bush Administration, was an emphasis on [[military transformation]], or using different approaches than "fighting the last war". Secretary of Defense [[Donald Rumsfeld]] was a constant advocate of transformation, emphasizing higher technology, more flexibility, and smaller forces, rather than the large heavy forces that were optimized to fight the Soviet Union. This was especially true after early operations in the [[Afghanistan War (2001-)]], where large U.S. ground forces were not used, but instead extensive [[special operations]] working with Afghan forces and using air power. Every war is different, however, and the reality in Afghanistan is there was an existing civil war and substantial indigenous resistance forces.
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| ===Assumed links between 9/11 and Iraq===
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| Late in the evening of 9/11, the President had been told, by CIA chief [[George Tenet]], that there was strong linkage to al-Qaeda. <ref name=Tenet>{{citation
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| | author = [[George Tenet]] with Bill Harlow | |
| | title = At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA
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| | publisher = Harpercollins| year = 2007 | isbn = 9780061147784
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| }}, p. 169</ref> On September 12, President Bush directed counterterrorism adviser [[Richard Clarke]] to review all information and reconsider if Saddam was involved in 9/11.<ref>Clarke, p. 31</ref> | |
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| Deputy Secretary of Defense [[Paul Wolfowitz]] sent Rumsfeld a memo, on September 17, called "Preventing More Events"; it argued that there was a better than 1 in 10 chance that Saddam was behind 9/11. <ref>Isikoff and Corn, p. 80}</ref> He had been told, by the CIA and FBI, that there was clear linkage to [[al-Qaeda]], but said the CIA lacked imagination.<ref>Isikoff & Corn, p. 108</ref> On September 19, 2001, the advisory [[Defense Advisory Board]], chaired by [[Richard Perle]], met for two days. Iraq was the focus. Among the speakers was [[Ahmed Chalabi]], a controversial Iraqi exile who argued for an approach similar to the not-yet-executed approach to Afghanistan: U.S. air and other support to insurgent Iraqis. <ref>COBRA II, p. 27</ref>
| | One reason Wolfowitz pushed for attacking Iraq was that he worried about what was then assumed would be a large American force in the treacherous terrain of Afghanistan. Since he believed, although without specific evidence, that there was between a 10 and 50 percent chance that Saddam was involved in 9/11, he thought Iraq, a brittle regime, might be the easier target. <ref>Woodward, p. 26</ref> |
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| On the same day, Bush had told Tenet that he wanted links between Iraq and 9/11 explored. <ref>{{citation | | On the same day, Bush had told Tenet that he wanted links between Iraq and 9/11 explored. <ref>{{citation |
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| | author = Ron Suskind}}, pp. 19-20</ref> | | | author = Ron Suskind}}, pp. 19-20</ref> |
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| While Tenet agreed there was a connection between al-Qaeda and 9-11, and that Saddam was supporting Palestinian and European terrorists, he said that the CIA could not make a firm connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq. While CIA continued its analysis, it accepted a briefing from a Pentagon group, under [[Douglas Feith]], to share its ideas about an Iran-9/11 connection. This was presented at CIA headquarters on August 14, 2002. According to Tenet, while Feith's team felt they had found things, in raw reports, that CIA had missed, they were not using the skills of professional intelligence analysts to consider other than the desired conclusion. His attention immediately was caught by a naval reservist working for Feith, Tina Shelton, who said the relationship between al-Qaeda and Iraq was an "open and shut case...no further analysis is required." A slide said there was a "mature, symbiotic relationship", which Tenet did not believe was supported. Pre-9/11 coordination between al-Qaeda operative [[Mohammed Atta]], in Prague, with the Iraqi intelligence service had become likely; Tenet described this association, which was later disproved, He called aside VADM Jake Jacoby, director of the [[Defense Intelligence Agency]], and telling him he worked for Rumsfeld and Tenet, and was to remove himself from Feith's policy channels. Later, Tenet learned that the Feith team was presenting to the White House, NSC, and Office of the Vice President. <ref>Tenet, pp. 346-348</ref> | | While Tenet agreed there was a connection between al-Qaeda and 9-11, and that Saddam was supporting Palestinian and European terrorists, he said that the CIA could not make a firm connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq. While CIA continued its analysis, it accepted a briefing from a Pentagon group, under Douglas Feith, to share its ideas about an Iran-9/11 connection. This was presented at CIA headquarters on August 14, 2002. According to Tenet, while Feith's team felt they had found things, in raw reports, that CIA had missed, they were not using the skills of professional intelligence analysts to consider other than the desired conclusion. His attention immediately was caught by a naval reservist working for Feith, Tina Shelton, who said the relationship between al-Qaeda and Iraq was an "open and shut case...no further analysis is required." A slide said there was a "mature, symbiotic relationship", which Tenet did not believe was supported. Pre-9/11 coordination between an al-Qaeda operative in Prague with the Iraqi intelligence service had become likely; Tenet described this association, which was later disproved, He called aside VADM Jake Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, and telling him he worked for Rumsfeld and Tenet, and was to remove himself from Feith's policy channels. Later, Tenet learned that the Feith team was presenting to the White House, NSC, and Office of the Vice President. <ref>Tenet, pp. 346-348</ref> |
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| It appeared a matter of faith in the White House, especially with Cheney, that a link existed between al-Qaeda and 9/11, and Iraq War policy assumed it. A February 2007 report by the Department of Defense Inspector General said no laws were broken, but Feith's group bypassed Intelligence Community safeguards <ref name=NYT2007-02-09>{{citation | | It appeared a matter of certainty in the White House, especially with Cheney, that a link existed between al-Qaeda and 9/11, and Iraq War policy assumed it. A February 2007 report by the Department of Defense Inspector General said no laws were broken, but Feith's group bypassed Intelligence Community safeguards <ref name=NYT2007-02-09>{{citation |
| | date =February 9, 2007 | | | date =February 9, 2007 |
| | title = Prewar Intelligence Unit at Pentagon Is Criticized | | | title = Prewar Intelligence Unit at Pentagon Is Criticized |
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| | journal = CNN | date = June 1, 2009 | | | journal = CNN | date = June 1, 2009 |
| | title = Cheney: No link between Saddam Hussein, 9/11}}</ref> | | | title = Cheney: No link between Saddam Hussein, 9/11}}</ref> |
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| | W. Patrick Lang, DIA national intelligence officer for the Middle East, said <blockquote>The Pentagon has banded together to dominate the government’s foreign policy, and they’ve pulled it off. They’re running Chalabi. The D.I.A. has been intimidated and beaten to a pulp. And there’s no guts at all in the C.I.A.”<ref name=NYorker2003-05-12 /></blockquote> |
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| ===Reviews by Rumsfeld=== | | ===Reviews by Rumsfeld=== |
| CENTCOM had a contingency plan for a new war with Iraq, designated OPLAN 1003-98. It assumed Iraq would launch an attack as it had done in 1990. Rumsfeld had OPLAN 1003-98 presented by LTG [[Greg Newbold]], director of operations for the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]], in late 2001. Rumsfeld believed the plan, which called for up to 500,000 troops, was far too large; Rumsfeld thought that no more than 125,000 would be needed. Newbold later said he regretted he did not say, at the time, <blockquote>Mr. Secretary, if you try to put a number on a mission like this, you may cause enormous mistakes. Give the military the task, give the military what you would like to see them do, and let them come up with it. I was the junior military man in the room, but I regret not saying it<ref>COBRA II, p. 4</ref></blockquote> | | CENTCOM had a contingency plan for a new war with Iraq, designated OPLAN 1003-98. It assumed Iraq would launch an attack as it had done in 1990. Rumsfeld had OPLAN 1003-98 presented by LTG Greg Newbold, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in late 2001. Rumsfeld believed the plan, which called for up to 500,000 troops, was far too large; Rumsfeld thought that no more than 125,000 would be needed. Newbold later said he regretted he did not say, at the time, <blockquote>Mr. Secretary, if you try to put a number on a mission like this, you may cause enormous mistakes. Give the military the task, give the military what you would like to see them do, and let them come up with it. I was the junior military man in the room, but I regret not saying it<ref>COBRA II, p. 4</ref></blockquote> |
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| Informally, Franks had called it "DESERT STORM II", using three corps as in 1991, but to force collapse of [[Saddam Hussein]]'s regime. On November 27, he told the Secretary of Defense that he had a new concept, but that detailed planning would be needed. <ref name=Franks>{{citation | | Informally, Franks had called it "Desert Storm II", using three corps as in 1991, but to force collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime. On November 27, he told the Secretary of Defense that he had a new concept, but that detailed planning would be needed. <ref name=Franks>{{citation |
| | title = American Soldier | | | title = American Soldier |
| | last1 = Franks | first1= Tommy | first2 = Malcolm | last2 = McConnell | | | last1 = Franks | first1= Tommy | first2 = Malcolm | last2 = McConnell |
| | publisher = Regan | year = 2004}}, p. 315</ref> Franks told Rumsfeld, during a videoconference on December 4, 2001, that it was a stale, troop-heavy concept. [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]] (CJCS) [[Dick Myers]], Vice CJCS [[Peter Pace]], and Undersecretary of Defense [[Douglas Feith]] were on the Washington end. Franks intended to ignore Feith, who he described as a "master of the off-the-wall question that rarely had relevance to operational problems." <ref>Franks, p. 331</ref> | | | publisher = Regan | year = 2004}}, p. 315</ref> Franks told Rumsfeld, during a videoconference on December 4, 2001, that it was a stale, troop-heavy concept. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) Dick Myers, Vice CJCS Peter Pace, and Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith were on the Washington end. Franks intended to ignore Feith, who he described as a "master of the off-the-wall question that rarely had relevance to operational problems." <ref>Franks, p. 331</ref> |
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| Franks proposed three basic options: | | Franks proposed three basic options: |
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| *REDUCED OPTION: A lesser number of countries supporting would mean a sequential air and ground operation. | | *REDUCED OPTION: A lesser number of countries supporting would mean a sequential air and ground operation. |
| *UNILATERAL OPTION: If launching forces from Kuwait, U.S. ships, and U.S. aircraft from distant bases, the air and ground operations would be "absolutely sequential" due to the lack of infrastructure to bring in all ground forces at once. | | *UNILATERAL OPTION: If launching forces from Kuwait, U.S. ships, and U.S. aircraft from distant bases, the air and ground operations would be "absolutely sequential" due to the lack of infrastructure to bring in all ground forces at once. |
| Franks wrote that during the Afghanistan planning, he had developed a technique that presented, visiually, the tasks to be done ("lines of operation") and the country or resource that would be affected by these tasks ("slices"). It is not clear when he first drew this visual aid for Iraq, although it was part of the December 12 briefing to Rumsfeld; the version reproduced in his book was dated December 8. | | Franks wrote that during the Afghanistan planning, he had developed a technique that presented, visually, the tasks to be done ("lines of operation") and the country or resource that would be affected by these tasks ("slices"). It is not clear when he first drew this visual aid for Iraq, although it was part of the December 12 briefing to Rumsfeld; the version reproduced in his book was dated December 8. |
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| [[Image:Franks slices and lines.png|thumb|left
| | Image:Franks slices and lines.png|thumb|left |
| |550px|Franks model, from sketch dated December 8, 2001]]<small> In this model, operational fires are strikes by aircraft, artillery, and missiles. Special Operations Forces operations are principally [[special reconnaissance]] and [[direct action (military)]]; [[unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)|unconventional warfare]] involves both military and CIA guerillas. [[Information operations]], as a line, includes [[psychological operations]], [[electronic warfare]], [[deception]], and [[computer network operations]]; politicomilitary and civil-military operations are doctrinally part of information operations but are shown separately here. RG and SRG are, respectively, the Iraqi Republican Guard and Special Republican Guard elite combat formations.</small> | | |550px|Franks model, from sketch dated December 8, 2001<small> In this model, operational fires are strikes by aircraft, artillery, and missiles. Special Operations Forces operations are principally special reconnaissance and direct action (military); unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)|unconventional warfare involves both military and CIA guerrillas. Information operations, as a line, includes psychological operations, electronic warfare, deception, and computer network operations; politicomilitary and civil-military operations are doctrinally part of information operations but are shown separately here. RG and SRG are, respectively, the Iraqi Republican Guard and Special Republican Guard elite combat formations.</small> |
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| ===Rumsfeld calls for new planning=== | | ===Rumsfeld calls for new planning=== |
| Early warning of Rumsfeld's desires came to LTC Thomas Reilly, chief of planning for [[Third United States Army]], still based at Fort McPherson in the U.S. While Third Army would become the Coalition Forces Land Component of CENTCOM, it had not yet been so designated, whenn Reilly received the notice on September 13, 2001. It used the term POLO STEP, the code word for Franks' concept of operations. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 19-20</ref> | | Early warning of Rumsfeld's desires came to LTC Thomas Reilly, chief of planning for Third United States Army, still based at Fort McPherson in the U.S. While Third Army would become the Coalition Forces Land Component of CENTCOM, it had not yet been so designated, when Reilly received the notice on September 13, 2001. It used the term POLO STEP, the code word for Franks' concept of operations. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 19-20</ref> |
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| On October 9, 2002, GEN [[Eric Shinseki]], [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], told staff officers "From today forward the main effort of the US Army must be to prepare for war with Iraq". <ref name=Point-I-Ch02>{{citation | | On October 9, 2002, GEN Eric Shinseki, Chief of Staff of the Army, told staff officers "From today forward the main effort of the US Army must be to prepare for war with Iraq". <ref name=Point-I-Ch02>{{citation |
| | title = On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom | | | title = On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom |
| | contribution = Chapter 2: Prepare, Mobilize, and Deploy | | | contribution = Chapter 2: Prepare, Mobilize, and Deploy |
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| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-2.htm | | | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-2.htm |
| | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref> | | | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref> |
| ===Special operations=== | | |
| George Tenet, [[Director of Central Intelligence]], had a major role in the decision to go to war, but also how it was to be fought. In the mid-nineties, CIA had found that a first coup attempt simply had gotten Iraqi CIA assets killed. The lesson learned from Afghanistan was that "covert action, effectively coupled with a larger military plan, could succeed. What we were telling the vice president that day [in early 2002] was that CIA could not go it alone in toppling Saddam...in Iraq, unlike in Afghanistan, CIA's role was to provide information to the military...assess the political environment...coordinate the efforts of indigenous networks of supporters for U.S. military advances..." In February 2002, the Agency re-created the [[Northern Iraq Liaison Element]] (NILE) teams to work with the Kurds. Later, CIA officers worked to encourage surrender, but this soon proved impractical; the U.S. forces were so small that the prisoners would have outnumbered the invaders. <ref>Tenet, pp. 385-387</ref> | | In the planning process, there were two key areas of friction between the civilians in the Department of Defense and the military:<ref name=Ricks-Fiasco>{{citation |
| | | author = Thomas E. Ricks |
| | | title = FIASCO: the American Military Adventure in Iraq |
| | | publisher = Penguin | year = 2006 |
| | | isbn=159320103X}}, p. 41</ref> |
| | *The role of the civilians in detailed operational planning |
| | *Caps on the number and type of troops that would be assigned |
| | ===Intensified overt operations=== |
| | For a number of years, the US and UK had been patrolling the "no-fly" zones of Iraq, and attacking air defense sites that directly threatened them. On September 4, 2002, however, there was a 100-aircraft strike that expanded the scope of Operation SOUTHERN WATCH, doing major damage to the H-3 and al-Baghdadi air bases near Jordan. These were more general-purpose than strictly air defense sites, and degraded a range of Iraqi capabilities. <ref name=Bodansky2004>{{citation |
| | | title = The Secret History of the Iraq War |
| | | author = Yossef Bodansky |
| | | publisher = Regan/Harpercollins |
| | | year = 2004 |
| | | isbn = 0060736798 |
| | }}, p. 46</ref> |
| | |
| | ===Secret operations in Iraq=== |
| | The Central Intelligence Agency, as well as military special operations, conducted a wide range of activities in Iraq well before the invasion. They included Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace such as adding intelligence collection, and Operational Preparation of the Battlespace such as destabilization and planning for using Iraqis in combat. |
| | |
| | George Tenet, Director of Central Intelligence, had a major role in the decision to go to war, but also how it was to be fought. A lesson learned from Afghanistan was that "covert action, effectively coupled with a larger military plan, could succeed. What we were telling the vice president that day [in early 2002] was that CIA could not go it alone in toppling Saddam...in Iraq, unlike in Afghanistan, CIA's role was to provide information to the military...assess the political environment...coordinate the efforts of indigenous networks of supporters for U.S. military advances..." In February 2002, the Agency re-created the Northern Iraq Liaison Element (NILE) teams to work with the Kurds. Later, CIA officers worked to encourage surrender, but this soon proved impractical; the U.S. forces were so small that the prisoners would have outnumbered the invaders. <ref>Tenet, pp. 385-387</ref> |
| | |
| | ====DBANABASIS: Destabilization==== |
| | At White House direction, the CIA had created a program, under the compartmented control system#Cryptonyms and pseudonyms|cryptonym DBANABASIS, for destabilizing Saddam. The deputy chief of the Iraq Operations Group assigned, by Deputy Director for Operations James Pavitt, to run the program, starting in late 2001, was John Maguire; the other, whose identity remains classified, is known as Luis. In the mid-nineties, CIA had found that a first coup attempt simply had gotten Iraqi CIA assets killed; Maguire had been involved in that operation, the failure of which he blamed, in large part, on Ahmed Chalabi. <ref>Isikoff and Corn, pp. 6-8</ref> |
| | |
| | On February 16, 2002, the President signed a Finding authorizing ANABASIS operations. The Congressional leadership was briefed. As opposed to the 1995 plan, ANABASIS would involve considerably more lethal activities. When they mentioned, for example, destroying railroad likes, Tyler Drumheller, chief of the European Division, said "you're going to kill people if you do this." Cofer Black, director of the Counterterrorism Center, had said "the gloves are off" soon after 9/11; this was an example of that change. Again as with Afghanistan, the CIA would make the initial political contacts with the resistance groups: |
| | *Kurdish Democratic Party headed by Massoud Barzani |
| | *Patriotic Union of Kurdistan led by Jalal Talabani |
| | Maguire's team entered in April, and met with both Barzani and Talabani. They met Iraqi troops who seemed eager for an American invasion. <ref>Isikoff and Corn, pp. 9-10</ref> |
| | |
| | ====DBROCKSTARS: intelligence collection==== |
| | In July 2002, a CIA team drove from Turkey to a base at Sulaymaniyah, 125 miles into Iraq from the Turkish border, and a few miles from the Iranian border. Turkey had been told that they were there primarily for collecting intelligence on Ansar al-Islam, a radical group opposed to the secular Kurdish parties, allied with al-Qaeda, and experimenting with poisons. It was based at Sargat, 25 miles from his base, at a location called Khurmal. The team was helped by Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. |
| | |
| | The supplementary assignment for the team, beyond Anwar al-Islam, was for covert action to overthrow Saddam. They had been ordered to penetrate the regime's military, intelligence, and security services. Confusing the situation was that they had Turkish escorts. Even with difficulties, they established liaison with a well-connected religious group, which access to the inner circles of Saddam's organizations, and irritation with the PUK. Their reports were to be identified as DBROCKSTARS. <ref>Woodward, pp. 140-144</ref> By February 2003, the informants were providing significant information, including communications from Saddam's Special Security Organization. Air defense installations were confirmed and bombed. <ref>Woodward, pp. 302-306</ref> 87 secure satellite telephones were made available, but, probably in early March, one asset was captured; 30 of the assets never reported again. <ref>Woodward, pp. 335-337</ref> |
| | |
| | ====Unconventional warfare==== |
| | Franks also intensively explored the potential for military special operations, both direct action by U.S. personnel, and, as in Afghanistan, using native resistance elements. In particular, it was agreed that United States Army Special Forces teams could lead up to 10,000 Kurds in Unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)|guerrilla warfare, a number large enough to be effective but not large enough to threaten Turkish sensitivity about spillover of Kurdish nationalism into Turkey. <ref>Woodward, p. 75</ref> The usually antagonistic |
| | KDP and PUK worked with Special Forces against units of Saddam Hussein's military at the start of the war, although <ref name=FM3-05.130>{{citation |
| | | title = Field Manual 3-05.130, Army Special Operations Forces: Unconventional Warfare |
| | | date = September 2008 |
| | | publisher = Department of the Army |
| | | url = http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-05-130.pdf |
| | }}, pp. 6-2 to 6-3</ref> yhis was later to result in partitioning Kurdistan into KDP and PUK areas. There eventually was a unified Kurdistan Regional Government by 2008. |
| | |
| | On March 15, a Kurdish group, with CIA technical assistance, derailed an Iraqi troop train by blowing up the railroad tracks, a more visible activity than expected by Washington. There were several dozen harassing attacks in Kurdistan, and a march by 20,000 protesters on Ba'ath Party headquarters in Kirkuk.<ref>Woodward, pp. 349-351</ref> |
| | |
| | ====JTFI: WMD intelligence==== |
| | Separate from DBANABASIS was the Joint Task Force on Iraq (JTFI) in the Counterproliferation Division. Its mission was not destabilization, but precise intelligence on WMD. Valerie Plame Wilson was its operations chief. JTFI developed sources inside Iraq, but worked from outside the country. Isikoff and Corn wrote that JTFI felt accurate intelligence was important, but "Bush, Cheney, and a handful of other senior officials already believed they had enough information to know what to do about Iraq". Rumsfeld, Perle, Wolfowitz, Libby and Feith believed Saddam was the principal danger to the U.S. and "we know what we are doing." <ref>Isikoff and Corn, pp. 15-17</ref> They considered Saddam a greater threat than bin Laden. |
| | |
| | ==Legislative authorization== |
| | Joint Resolution 114 of October 11, 2002 is the primary legislative authorization for combat operations, although some advocates of presidential authority maintained it was within the inherent powers of the Presidency. |
| | |
| | Voting was not strictly on party lines. In the Senate, it was opposed by the Independent and some Democrats. |
| | {{col-begin}} |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | {| |
| | |- valign=top |
| | | |
| | *Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii) |
| | *Jeff Bingaman (D-New Mexico) |
| | *Barbara Boxer (D-California) |
| | *Robert Byrd (D-West Virginia) |
| | *Lincoln Chaffee (R-Rhode Island) |
| | *Kent Conrad (D-North Dakota) |
| | *Jon Corzine (D-New Jersey) |
| | *Mark Dayton (D-Minnesota) |
| | *Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | *Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin) |
| | *Bob Graham (D-Florida) |
| | *Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) |
| | *Jim Jeffords (I-Vermont) |
| | *Ted Kennedy (D-Massachusetts)+ |
| | *Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) |
| | *Carl Levin (D-Michigan) |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | *Barbara Mikulski (D-Maryland) |
| | *Patty Murray (D-Washington) |
| | *Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island) |
| | *Paul Sarbanes (D-Maryland) |
| | *Debbie Stabenow (D-Michigan) |
| | *Paul Wellstone (D-Minnesota)+ |
| | *Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) |
| | |} |
| | |
| | The House also was not on strict party lines. Voting against were: |
| | {{col-begin}} |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | {| |
| | |- valign=top |
| | | |
| | *Neil Abercrombie (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Hawaii) |
| | *Tom Allen (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Maine) |
| | *Joe Baca (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Brian Baird (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Washington) |
| | *John Baldacci (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Maine)§° |
| | *Tammy Baldwin (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Wisconsin) |
| | *Gresham Barrett (R-South Carolina) |
| | *Xavier Becerra (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Earl Blumenauer (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Oregon) |
| | *David Bonior (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) § |
| | *Robert Brady (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Pennsylvania) |
| | *Corinne Brown (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Florida) |
| | *Sherrod Brown (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) |
| | *Lois Capps (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Michael Capuano (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Benjamin Cardin (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Maryland) |
| | *Julia Carson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Indiana) |
| | *William Clay (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Missouri) |
| | *Eva Clayton (Democratic Party (United States)|D-North Carolina) § |
| | *James Clyburn (Democratic Party (United States)|D-South Carolina) |
| | *Gary Condit (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) § |
| | *John Conyers (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) |
| | *Jerry Costello (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *William Coyne (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Pennsylvania) § |
| | *Elijah Cummings (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Maryland) |
| | * Susan Davis (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Danny Davis (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *Peter DeFazio (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Oregon) |
| | *Diana DeGette (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Colorado) |
| | *Bill Delahunt (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Rosa DeLauro (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Connecticut) |
| | *John Dingell (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) |
| | *Lloyd Doggett (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Mike Doyle (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Pennsylvania) |
| | *John Duncan, Jr. (R-Tennessee) |
| | *Anna Eshoo (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Lane Evans (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *Sam Farr (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Chaka Fattah (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Pennsylvania) |
| | *Bob Filner (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Barney Frank (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Charles Gonzalez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Luis Gutierrez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | *Alice Hastings (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Florida) |
| | *Earl Hilliard (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Alabama)§ |
| | *Maurice Hinchey (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Ruben Hinojosa (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Rush Holt (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New Jersey) |
| | *Mike Honda (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Darlene Hooley (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Oregon) |
| | *John Hostettler (R-Indiana) |
| | *Amo Houghton (R-New York) § |
| | *Jay Inslee (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Washington) |
| | *Jesse Jackson, Jr. (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *Sheila Jackson-Lee (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Eddie Bernice Johnson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Stephanie Tubbs Jones (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) |
| | *Marcy Kaptur (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) |
| | *Dale Kildee (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) |
| | *Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) |
| | *Jerry Kleczka (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Wisconsin) |
| | *Dennis Kucinich (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) § |
| | *John LaFalce (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *James Langevin (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Rhode Island) |
| | *Rick Larsen (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Washington) |
| | *John Larson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Connecticut) |
| | *Jim Leach (R-Iowa) |
| | *Barbara Lee (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Sandy Levin (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) |
| | *John Lewis (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Georgia) |
| | *Bill Lipinski (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) § |
| | *Zoe Lofgren (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *James Maloney (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Connecticut) § |
| | *Robert Matsui (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) + |
| | *Karen McCarthy (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Missouri) § |
| | *Betty McCollum (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Minnesota) |
| | *Jim McDermott (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Washington) |
| | *Jim McGovern (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Cynthia McKinney (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Georgia) |
| | *Carrie Meek (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Florida) § |
| | *Gregory Meeks (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Robert Menendez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New Jersey) |
| | *Juanita Millender-McDonald (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *George Miller (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Alan Mollohan (Democratic Party (United States)|D-West Virginia) |
| | *Jim Moran (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Virginia) |
| | *Connie Morella (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Maryland) |
| | {{col-break|width=33%}} |
| | *Jerrold Nadler (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Grace Napolitano (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Richard Neal (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Jim Oberstar (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Minnesota) |
| | *David Obey (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Wisconsin) |
| | *John Olver (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Major Owens (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Frank Pallone, Jr. (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New Jersey) |
| | *Ed Pastor (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Arizona) |
| | *Ron Paul (R-Texas) |
| | *Donald Payne (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New Jersey) |
| | *Nancy Pelosi (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *David Price (Democratic Party (United States)|D-North Carolina) |
| | *Nick Rahall (Democratic Party (United States)|D-West Virginia) |
| | *Charles Rangel (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Silvestre Reyes (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Lynn Rivers (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Michigan) § |
| | *Ciro Rodriguez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Texas) |
| | *Lucille Roybal-Allard (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) § |
| | *Bobby Rush (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *Martin Olav Sabo (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Minnesota) |
| | *Loretta Sanchez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) |
| | *Thomas Sawyer (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) |
| | *Jan Schakowsky (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Illinois) |
| | *Bobby Scott (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Virginia) |
| | *Jose Serrano (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Louise Slaughter (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Vic Snyder (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Arkansas) |
| | *Hilda Solis (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Pete Stark (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Ted Strickland (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Ohio) |
| | *Burt Stupak (Michigan) |
| | *Mike Thompson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Bennie Thompson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Mississippi) |
| | *John Tierney (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Massachusetts) |
| | *Edolphus Towns (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Mark Udall (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Colorado) |
| | *Tom Udall (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New Mexico) |
| | *Nydia Velaquez (Democratic Party (United States)|D-New York) |
| | *Pete Visclosky (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Indiana) |
| | *Maxine Waters (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Diane Watson (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *Melvin Watt (Democratic Party (United States)|D-North Carolina) |
| | *Lynn Woolsey (Democratic Party (United States)|D-California) |
| | *David Wu (Democratic Party (United States)|D-Oregon) |
| | |} |
| | |
| | + Deceased<br /> |
| | § Retired from office <br /> |
| | ° Now Governor<br /> |
|
| |
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| ==Theater/operational planning== | | ==Theater/operational planning== |
| In the [[Gulf War]], there was no common commander for all land forces; GEN [[H Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.]] gave direct orders to the U.S. Army and Marine unites. Experience both then and in WWII showed the need for a land forces commander.
| | Detailed planning by CENTCOM began while active combat was ongoing in Afghanistan, in December 2002.<ref>Franks, pp. 329-335</ref> At the time, GEN Eric Shinseki, then Chief of Staff of the Army, testified to Congress that the number of troops approved by Rumsfeld was inadequate. Shinseki, however, was not in the chain of command for operational deployment. Although the Chief of Staff is the senior officer of the United States Army, he is responsible for developing doctrine and preparing forces for use by the combatant commanders. |
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| | The responsible combatant commander was GEN Tommy Franks, commanding United States Central Command. Franks had already begun contingency planning. Franks discussed high-level concepts with Rumsfeld and his staff, and returned with alternatives. Once the broad theater-level concept was ready, Franks tasked his subordinate land, air, special operations and naval commanders to go to the next level. |
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| | ==Criticism by senior officers== |
| | A number of generals were highly critical of the plan or its execution, focused especially on what they considered the unrealistic goals of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, or on Rumsfeld's management of the occupation. <ref name=Deary>{{citation |
| | |title= Six against the Secretary: the Retired Generals and Donald Rumsfeld |
| | |first = David S. | last = Deary |
| | |publisher = Air War College |
| | | date = February 23, 2007 |
| | | url =http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=25&q=https://www.afresearch.org/skins/rims/q_mod_be0e99f3-fc56-4ccb-8dfe-670c0822a153/q_act_downloadpaper/q_obj_f1b997dd-4400-4028-874a-02bcf20de9e4/display.aspx%3Frs%3Denginespage&usg=AFQjCNGtXCtFDMj8GW3wj1mNEmWusDbZ3A}}</ref> They include Paul Eaton, who headed training of the Iraqi military in 2003-2004;<ref name=NYT2006-03-19>{{citation |
| | | title = For his failures, Rumsfeld must go |
| | | author = Paul Eaton |
| | | date = 19 March 2006 |
| | | journal = New York Times |
| | | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/19/opinion/19iht-edeaton.html |
| | }}</ref> former chiefs of United States Central Command (Anthony Zinni and Joseph Hoar); Greg Newbold, Director of the Joint staff from 2000 to 2002;<ref name=Time2006-04-09>{{citation |
| | | date = 9 April 2006 |
| | | title = Why Iraq Was a Mistake |
| | | author = Greg Newbold | journal = Time |
| | | url = http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1181629,00.html |
| | }}</ref> John Riggs, a planner who had criticized personnel levels, in public, while on duty; division|division commanders Charles Swannack and John Batiste. |
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| | Newbold regretted he had not resigned when the proposals were first made. Swannack retired two days after ending a command tour in Iraq. Eaton also quit his assignment in Iraq. |
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| In November 2001, the commander of [[United States Central Command]], [[Tommy Franks]]<ref>unrelated to Gen. Fred Franks in the Gulf War</ref> designated [[Third United States Army]] as the [[CENTCOM]] Land Forces Component Command (CFLCC). LTG [[David McKiernan]] took command of Third Army in September 2002. According to MG Henry "Hank" Stratman, deputy commanding general for support of Third Army, eventual combat with Iraq was assumed when he took his post in the summer of 2001, even before the [[9-11 attack]].
| | ==Major combat phase== |
| | {{main|Iraq War, major combat phase}} |
| | Ground combat was directed by an intermediate headquarters in Iraq, based on Third United States Army, called Coalition Forces Land Combat Command (CFLCC) under LTG David McKiernan. |
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| With the recommendation of [[Newt Gingrich]], COL [[Doug Macgregor]] prepared a briefing, which went to Runsfeld, which went against the conventional wisdom that large forces would be needed to defeat Saddam. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 33-35</ref> Macgregor geve the briefing to Gingrich on December 31, 2001. It advocated a quick strike into Baghdad by three brigade-sized forces, followed by 15,000 light infantry forces to maintain order.
| | While the start of major combat is often stated as March 20, 2003, operations actually had started well before then. Special operations forces were in the country, and there had been a gradual intensification of bombing under the "no-fly" programs, Operation NORTHERN WATCH and Operation SOUTHERN WATCH. |
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| Macgregor was sent to brief GEN [[Tommy Franks]], commanding [[U.S. Central Command]], on January 12, 2002. After Macgregor briefed Franks, Franks responded, "Attack from a cold start. I agree. Straight at Baghdad. Small and fast. I agree. Simultaneous air and ground. Probably, but not sure yet." After his return to Washington, Macgregor decided that Franks had given him a polite reception as a courtesy to Rumsfeld; Macgregor wrote a memo of the meeting, which Gingrich forwarded to [[Dick Cheney]] and other political contacts. Franks' planner, MG Gene Renuart, argued to Rumsfeld that Macgregor's plan was too light.
| | A "running start" had been planned, and it was fully expected that the plan would alter with events, as it is a truism no plan survives contact with the enemy. Both sides did consider Baghdad the key centers of gravity (military)|center of gravity, but both made incorrect assumptions about the enemy's plans. The U.S. was still sensitive over the casualties taken by a too-light raid in Operation GOTHIC SERPENT in Mogadishu, Somalia. As a result, the initial concept of operations was to surround Baghdad with tanks, while airborne and air assault infantry cleared it block-by-block. <ref name=Zucchino>{{citation |
| | | author = David Zucchino |
| | | title = Thunder Run: the Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad |
| | | publisher = Atlantic Monthly Press | year = 2004 | ISBN = 0871139111}}, p. 3</ref> Iraq, in turn, both assumed a siege of Iraq, but, unknown to the Coalition, expected to use irregulars to harass the supply lines of advancing forces. |
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| Detailed planning by CENTCOM began while active combat was ongoing in [[Afghanistan]], in December 2002.<ref>Franks, pp. 329-335</ref> At the time, GEN [[Eric Shinseki]], then [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], testified to Congress that the number of troops approved by Rumsfeld was inadequate. Shinseki, however, was not in the chain of command for operational deployment. Although the Chief of Staff is the senior officer of the [[United States Army]], he is responsible for developing doctrine and preparing forces for use by the combatant commanders.
| | The Coalition did not expect to be able to reach Baghdad in a single bound; there was always an intention to make entry, regroup, and then make a final assault. Baghdad was not the only target; there were urgent needs to secure the oilfields against destruction, and to take control of the southern port of Umm Qasr. Kurds in the north were already semi-autonomous and wanted to take action; the relations between the Kurds in Iraq and Kurds in Turkey was extremely sensitive. |
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| GEN Franks briefed Secretary Rumsfeld on February 1, with two alternative plans. The first, informally called "DESERT STORM II", repeated the sequential approach of [[Operation DESERT STORM]]:<ref>Franks, p. 366-370</ref>
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| *Phase I: buildup of forces before invasion, with increased air strikes in the no-fly zones and early staging of special operations forces; prestaging of approximately 160,000 troops
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| *Phase II: Air-centric operations of approximately 3 weeks, preparing the battlefield for the major ground forces attacks
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| *Phase III: Major ground forces attack with approximately 105,000 troops
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| *Phase IV: Occupation and reconstruction
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| The alternative, preferred by Franks, was called RUNNING START, and was chosen as the next planning point. It moved Special Operations preparation into Phase I, made the air and ground phases essentially simultaneous (i.e., merged into a combined Phase III of [[#decisive combat operations|decisive combat operations]]), and then a reconstruction phase; the phases were not renumbered.
| | Baghdad was effectively in U.S. hands by April 9. Deputy CENTCOM commander Mike DeLong said three factors made looting much worse than expected:<ref name=DeLong>{{citation |
| | | author = Michael DeLong with Noah Lukeman |
| | | title = Inside CENTCOM: the Unvarnished Truth about the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq |
| | | publisher = Regnery | year = 2009 |
| | | isbn = 0895260204}}, pp. 117-118</ref> |
| | *Saddam opened his prison doors and let prisoners free; these were primarily "ordinary decent criminals" rather than dissenters; it added 30,000-50,000 outlaws to the confusion |
| | *The "resignation" of the Iraqi police, which DeLong said was the most unexpected. He is unsure that the information operations campaign urging the military to disarm also affected the police |
| | *The dissolution of the Iraqi army, both by its soldiers and as a political decision, putting large numbers of unemployed young men onto the streets. |
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| In the next review, additional alternatives were introduced, still assuming some level of simultaneous air and ground attack, as distinct from the separate air phase of [[Operation DESERT STORM]]. They varied with the number of troops required:
| | ==Interim Military Government== |
| | There had been confusion on who was planning Phase IV, and there was even more confusion as to who would execute it. |
| | "At the most fundamental level, many were not sure who was in charge of the overall Phase IV effort: Ambassador L. Paul Bremer (Garner’s successor) or the CJTF-7 commander. Military officers believed there was a clear division of labor between the military and civilian elements – CJTF-7 handled all military efforts, for example – while civilians believed CPA led the entire effort."<ref name=Arana>{{citation |
| | | title = Strengthening the Interagency Process:The Case for Enhancing the Role of the National Security Advisor |
| | | author = Julio Arana, Jonathan M. Owens, David Wrubel |
| | | publisher = Joint Forces Staff College |
| | | date = 25 August 2006 |
| | | url = http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA455278}}, pp. 13-14</ref> The bureaucratic infighting was worst between State and Defense, probably with involvement from the Office of the Vice President and the National Security Council. The role of the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, in such circumstances, is supposed to be collecting the positions and submitting them to the President when he is the only one that can make the decision. This did not happen. |
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| *GENERATED START took the most troops, and was considered impractical almost from the beginning; Saddam had learned not to give the U.S. time to prepare. GENERATED START assumed the U.S. would launch an attack only when it had all forces in theater, which would take the longest time and be inflexible.
| | While the fighting was in progress, Franks asked for a provisional government to be established. |
| *RUNNING START option, which assumed launching combat operations with minimum forces and continuing to deploy forces and employ them as they arrived. The final option stemmed from wargaming the running start.
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| *HYBRID PLAN, which evolved from war-gaming RUNNING START. reflected an assessment that the minimum force required reached a higher number of troops than envisioned in the running start option.
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| The selected plan was a compromise solution between HYBRID and RUNNING SSTART, with more forces than the latter but fewer than the former. RUNNING START offered operational surprise and less demand for synchronization than HYBRID PLAN. | | ===Changes from the White House=== |
| | Rumsfeld and the White House made rapid changes. The decision was made to bring in L. Paul Bremer|L. Paul "Jerry" Bremer, who had been Henry Kissinger's chief of staff, Ambassador to the Netherlands, and head of the State Department counterterrorism office. He had no Middle East experience, which Rumsfeld considered an advantage: Rumsfeld had rejected some of Garner's appointments because they were State Department Arabists who might not be sympathetic to the President's goal of remaking Iraqi society. |
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| ===Critical factors===
| | President Bush publicly announced the decision on 6 May 2003, 17 days after Garner arrived in Baghdad as the head of ORHA. The US Government never issued a formal order dissolving the ORHA. Some of its staff members, such as Meghan O'Sullivan. joined the CPA, and Garner returned to civilian life.<ref name=OPII-II-IV>{{citation |
| Several key factors had the potential to override any plan. First, the Iraqi oil infrastructure had to be protected from sabotage, as its revenue would be key in reconstruction. The military and CIA had different information as to Saddam's intentions; as a practical matter, the oil facilities were kept under close surveillance as the attack grew closer. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 166-167</ref>
| | | author = Donald P. Wright, Timothy R. Reese with the Contemporary Operations Study Team |
| | | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2008/onpoint/chap04-05.htm |
| | | contribution = Part II, Transition to a New Campaign; Chapter 4: Leading the New Campaign: Transitions in Command and Control in Operation Iraqi Freedom |
| | |title = ON POINT II: Transition to the New Campaign; The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom May 2003-January 2005 |
| | }}</ref> |
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| Second, Saddam Hussein was the key to Iraqi resistance. Ideally, he would leave the country. If, however, he could be located and killed by air attack, that also would change priorities.
| | Bremer, in turn, wanted full authority. At first, he was to share authority with Khalizad, who was the point of contact to Iraqis who might be in a full government. When Bremer's appointment was announced on May 6 by the White House, Khalizad had just been told he was not included in the solution, amazing Powell. When Powell asked Rice for an explanation, she said she had nothing to do with it.<ref>COBRA II, pp. 475-476</ref> |
| ===V Corps===
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| While V Corps was stationed in Germany, all plans assumed it would be the heavy striking force in any attack against southern Iraq. Planning for such an attack had long been one of its responsibilities. Planning intensity intensified in April 2002. It deployed to Poland and conducted Exercise VICTORY STRIKE, a training exercise with Iraq in mind. Under CFLCC, a command exercise, LUCKY WARRIOR, in Kuwait, involved V Corps and I MEF. Next, the annual CENTCOM exercise, INTERNAL LOOK, added practice for the Joint Force Air Component Command (JFACC), while Special Operations Command for CENTCOM (SOCCENT) formally established two Joint Special Operations Task Forces (JSOTF): JSOTF-North and JSOTF-West. It assumed I MEF with part of its air wing, 1st Marine Division with two regimental combat teams, and V Corps with all of 3rd ID, an attack helicopter regiment, and part of the corps artillery. <ref name=Point-I-Ch02 />
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| ===I MEF===
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| U.S. Marine planning had, since the Second World War, focused on relatively small, quick-response operations from the sea, typically by [[Marine Air-Ground Task Force#Marine Expeditionary Unit|brigade-sized Marine Expeditionary Units]]. They had fought a large-scale operation in [[Operation DESERT SABER]].
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| Nevertheless, the first Operational Planning Team, held in March 2002, assumed that the I MEF effort would support large-scale Army movement. Its concept was that the Marines would send "Task Force South" to move from Kuwait, capture Jalibah Airport, and stage from there to capture Qalat Sikar and An Kut airfields closer to Baghdad. They would then secure southern Iraq, while the Army brought in resources for the main attack.
| | ===Force drawdown and command reorganization=== |
| | On April 16, Franks declared the end of major combat,<ref>Franks, pp. 528-529</ref> and ordered the withdrawal of the major U.S. combat units. The CENTCOM forward headquarters in Qatar and I MEF were to be withdrawn. U.S. forces would be reduced to 30,000 by the end of August, which the U.S. believed was adequate. <ref name=Sanchez>{{citation |
| | | author = Ricardo S. Sanchez with Donald T. Phillips |
| | | title = Wiser in Battle: a Soldier's Story |
| | | publisher = HarperCollins | year = 2008 |
| | | isbn = 9780061562426}}, p. 168</ref> |
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| This was too deliberate and logistics-intense for Rumsfeld's "RUNNING START" model. Counterproposals were sent back to plan for single Army and Marine brigades to start individual advances. I MEF countered that it was a better overall headquarters than V Corps, since it was experienced in controlling air operations where an Army corps was not. In the planning of July 2002, it was tentatively accepted that I MEF might indeed be the main headquarters. The U.S. Marines also welcomed the participation of British [[Royal Marine]]s.<ref name=>{{citation
| | While regular Iraqi military units were no longer fighting, resistance by irregulars continued, first by Ba'ath loyalists, then random Iraqis objecting to an invasion, but then sectarian fighting among the Shi'a, Sunni and Kurds, and their various factions. A full-fledged insurgency, however, was not underway until July. Since the Iraqi police as well as the Iraqi army had dissolved, providing population security fell to the military, which was not organized for it, as, for example, the WWII Constabulary in Germany had been. |
| | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=ldBlTngsVAYC&pg=PA33&lpg=PA33&dq=%22I+MEF%22+Planning+%22Iraq+War%22&source=bl&ots=Ipw9NMhIno&sig=oNmNQVwTDV58U2cOc34eiYN_72I&hl=en&ei=bXAlStLVEITKtgeGw53qBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#PPA33,M1
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| | title = Basrah, Baghdad, and beyond: the U.S. Marine Corps in the second Iraq War
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| | author = Nicholas E. Reynolds
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| | publisher = Naval Institute Press | year = 2005
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| | ISBN=1591147174
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| }}, pp. 31-33</ref>
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| The Marines also needed to coordinate with Special Operations forces.
| | CFLCC was redesignated Combined Joint Task Force 7 (CJTF-7) on May 1, but McKiernan's headquarters was replaced by V Corps, then under LTG Wallace. MG Ricardo Sanchez, then commanding 1st Armored Division (U.S.) in Germany, was promoted to LTG and given command of V Corps. According to Sanchez, Franks had not specified a specific Phase IV role for CENTCOM or V Corps. <ref>Sanchez, p. 171</ref> |
| ===Special Operations forces===
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| Special Operations had played a major and effective part in Afghanistan, and were visible to Rumsfeld and Franks. As in Afghanistan, they divided into "white" (i.e., acknowledged) and "black" (i.e., covert forces).
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| The main white operations were 5th Special Forces Group in the south, under COL [[John Mulholland]], and 10th Special Forces Group in the north under COL [[Michael Repass]]. They reported both to CENTCOM and Task Force 20.
| | ====De-Ba'athification, retention of Army and Police==== |
| | {{main|De-Ba'athification}} |
| | Franks and DeLong recommended that only the senior Ba'ath Party leadership be blacklisted, on the assumption, much as with the Soviet Communist Party, that Party members ran most of the basic government services. Nevertheless, the Party was dissolved on May 12, and CENTCOM was faced with the job of creating a new civilian infrastructure. Garner said that he had protested full de-Ba'athification to Bremer, who said "These are the directions I have. I have directions to execute this..." <ref name=Garner-PBS>{{citation |
| | | url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/yeariniraq/interviews/garner.html |
| | | title = The Lost Year in Iraq: Interview, Lt. Gen. (retired) Jay Garner |
| | | date = 11 August 2006 |
| | | journal = PBS Frontline}}</ref> |
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| Larger, however, was Task Force 20, secretly located on Saudi soil at Ar'ar, commanded by MG [[Dell Dailey]], who was also the overall head of [[Joint Special Operations Command]]. TF 20 included [[Delta Force]], the [[75th Ranger Regiment]], [[MC-130 COMBAT TALON]] and other large [[Air Force Special Operations Command]] aircraft and helicopters from the [[160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment]]. In an unprecedented move, the task force had been supplemented with a conventional [[paratroop]] battalion from the 82nd Airborne Division. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 327-328</ref>
| | ====Resources from other nations==== |
| | CENTCOM tried to get peacekeeping resources from other nations. The Administration preemption doctrine had assumed that while the US might have acted unilaterally, successful operations might cause allies to share the postwar work. The immediate operations were so confused, however, that this was never really evaluated. |
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| One of the key, although controversial, contingency missions for TF 20 was seizure of Baghdad International Airport, especially if the Saddam Hussein regime collapsed. The latter was always at the minds of the senior civilian leaders, but contingency planning for leadership collapse went back to the Second World War: [[Operation RANKIN CASE C]]. In WWII, that indeed was an airborne mission. In this war, however, the 3rd Infantry Division staff felt they could do the job more efficiently and with less risk.
| | Promises of a Muslim peacekeeping unit did not materialize. The Saudis did not want to be under U.S. command, and the US was nervous about the hospital they did volunteer, believing the staff might contain Wahhabist activists. The United Arab Emirates was not interested in policing the south. |
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| Delta and supporting TF20 units, however, had other missions.
| | India considered sending troops, in response to a request delivered by BG E.J. Sinclair, assistant division commander of the 101st Airborne Division. From the Indian perspective, reasons to participate were to be recognized as more of a great power. Reasons against included an April parliamentary resolution that the war was illegal, and a general question of risks and benefits for India. India is extensively experienced in peacekeeping, but always under UN auspices. The proposal was that it put its troops under US and UK command. Given the unpopularity of the war, what would be the Indian public perception of Indian lives lost, and Indians seen as occupiers, especially among India's Muslim population and in the Middle East? How would this affect US support of Pakistan, or would Pakistan seize the opportunity if India did not?<ref name=AT2003-06-19>{{citation |
| ===The Turkish front===
| | | title = India dithers over Iraq dilemma |
| Relations among Turkey, the Iraqi government, the Kurds of Iraq, separatist Kurds in Turkey, and, to a lesser extent, Kurds in neighboring countries has always been sensitive.
| | | author = Sudha Ramachandran |
| | | journal = Asia Times | date = 19 June 2003 |
| | | url = http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/EF19Df01.html}}</ref> |
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| Using the [[4th Infantry Division]] (4ID), the most technically advanced in the U.S. Army, planners wanted to launch a northern front from Turkey, but Turkish public opinion was opposed. On March 1, the Turkish Parliament refused to consent to any U.S. operations, including overflights by cruise missiles or aircraft, search and rescue, much less ground troops. At this point, the [[4th Infantry Division (U.S.)]] was already in ships off the Turkish coast. Colin Powell had considered the need for a northern front overrated. If there were no northern front and Iraqi forces moved south, that would simply make them better targets. He did think Rumsfeld liked the idea as part of keeping the southern force smaller.
| | Poland led a division, but of uneven quality. A Polish official, Marek Belka, was deputy head of ORHA. Poland does have peacekeeping experience, but not in this sensitive environment. It would get general assistance from NATO, but NATO was not itself going to be seen as part of the peacekeeping force.<ref>{{citation |
| | | title = Iraq: Is Poland Up To The Task Of Directing A Peacekeeping Zone? |
| | | author = Breffni O'Rourke |journal = Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty |
| | | url =http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/iraq/2003/06/iraq-030606-rfel-171831.htm |
| | | date = 6 June 2003}}</ref> The Poles also would command a Spanish force with restrictive rules of engagement. |
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| Eventually, Turkey gave some limited and low-visibility access, including overflights by aircraft and missiles, and operations by the [[10th Special Forces Group]], under COL Charlie Cleveland. On March 22, it flew to the Bashur and Sulaymaniyah areas in the Turkish zones of northern Iraq, using a circuitous, low-altitude, and dangerous path over the Sinai Peninsula, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Turkey did allow one damaged [[MC-130 COMBAT TALON]] to make an emergency landing in Turkey. The 10th Group eventually raised 70,000 Kurdish fighters that interfered with the southern movement of Iraqi Army units. <ref name=Peltier>{{citation
| | A Ukraine|Ukrainian brigade was sent, but was of minimal ability; only the UK forces, with Italian and other NATO supplements, were effective. <ref>COBRA II, p. 471</ref> |
| |title = Surrogate Warfare: The Role of U.S. Army Special Forces | | ==Security operations== |
| | author = Isaac J. Peltier
| | CJTF-7 conducted operations to root out resistance, especially by Saddam loyalists. Operation PENINSULA STRIKE, on June 9-12, cordoned and swept areas of the Sunni Triangle.<ref>{{citation |
| | publisher = School of Advanced Military Studies, [[Command and General Staff College]] | | | title = Operation Peninsula Strike,June 9-12, 2003 |
| | date = Academic Year 2004-2005 | | | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/peninsula_strike.htm |
| | url = http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA436109 | | | journal = Globalsecurity}}</ref> Operation DESERT SCORPION, from June 15 to 19, swept the Sunni Triangle with raids based on targeted intelligence, and also conducted some humanitarian operations. <ref>{{citation |
| | comment=Damaged PDF; this is Google cached copy}}, p. 7</ref>
| | | title = Operation Desert Scorpion Continues Throughout Iraq | author = Jim Garamone |
| | | journal = American Forces Press Service |
| | | date = 17 June 2003 |
| | | url = http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=28865}}</ref>"These are highly coordinated, intelligence- driven operations," according to a V Corps spokesman. "These are places where we've been shot at, ambushed from and we have tracked the actions to these people." |
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| McKiernan, in February, had recommended to Franks essentially the same thing as did Powell: send the 4th ID to the south. If the Turks changed their position, units could always be sent there. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 115-116</ref> Franks, however, thought that keeping a northern threat would keep the Iraqis distracted. He believed that the Iraqis focused on the 4th ID as the main invasion force; even when its ships moved south through the Suez Canal, Arab media reports assumed that it would land in Jordan and attack from the west. By not committing the division to the south, he believed he could maintain a diversion. <ref>Franks p. 559</ref>
| | Operation VICTORY BOUNTY went through the same areas on July 26 to 29, but Sanchez decided to reduce the sweep operations, in part innocent Iraqis were being taken into custody, and the custody facilities were overloaded. It was unclear how to treat detainees that were not clearly military, but he ordered, in June, for them to be treated under the rules of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Following VICTORY BOUNTY, he examined the Abu Ghraib and Khan Bani Sadh prisons as potential detention sites, but found the second essentially destroyed. Abu Ghraib was the only available facility, although Sanchez ruled that the torture and execution chambers had to be sealed. <ref>Sanchez, ''Wiser in Battle'', pp. 206-207</ref> It was not fully understood that the division commanders were doing little screening of detainees, which contributed to overcrowding. BG Barbara Karpinski said the 4th ID was the least selective, the 82nd Airborne the best, the 101st fairly good, and the 1st Armored would also send too many.<ref name=Ricks-Fiasco2>{{citation |
| | | author = Thomas E. Ricks |
| | | title = FIASCO: the American Military Adventure in Iraq |
| | | publisher = Penguin | year = 2006 |
| | | isbn=159320103X}}, p. 239</ref> |
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| ===Phase IV Planning===
| | While it is a danger to micromanage, some officers felt Sanchez had little overall vision and the various divisions had different styles. In the north, the 101st Airborne Division, under MG David Petraeus, was having good success both with security and nation-building, but it was also dealing with the more cooperative Kurds. Still, Petraeus was the Army's counterinsurgency expert and took a different approach than other commanders.<ref name=Gentile>{{citation |
| During the planning phase, Rumsfeld told Franks that LTG Jay Garner would be responsible for reconstruction, reporting to CENTCOM. <ref>Franks, pp. 422-423</ref> A number of retired generals have been highly critical of the plan, focused especially on what they considered the unrealistic goals of Secretary of Defense [[Donald Rumsfeld]]. They include [[Paul Eaton]], who headed training of the Iraqi military in 2003-2004; formal chiefs of [[United States Central Command]] ([[Anthony Zinni]] and [[Joseph Hoar]]); [[Greg Newbold]], Director of the [[Joint staff]] from 2000 to 2002; [[John Riggs]], a planner who had criticized personnel levels, in public, while on duty; [[division|division commander]]s [[Charles Swannack]] and [[John Baptiste]].<ref name=Deary>{{citation
| | | title = A (Slightly) Better War: A Narrative and Its Defects |
| |title= Six agaist the Secretary: the Retired Generals and Donald Rumsfeld | | | author = Gian P. Gentile |
| |first = David S. | last = Deary | | | journal = World Affairs | date = Summer 2008 |
| |publisher = Air War College | | | url = http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/2008%20-%20Summer/full-Gentile.html}}</ref> |
| | date = February 23, 2007
| | The 4th Infantry Division, under MG Ray Odierno, was having a difficult time in the Sunni Triangle, and used the most force; a retired general at CPA said it fueled the insurgency <ref>Ricks, ''Fiasco'', pp. 232-233</ref> The 101st Airborne Division, commanded by MG Charles Swannack, was having slightly better luck closer to Baghdad. <ref>Ricks, ''Fiasco'', pp. 226-232</ref> |
| | url =http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=25&q=https://www.afresearch.org/skins/rims/q_mod_be0e99f3-fc56-4ccb-8dfe-670c0822a153/q_act_downloadpaper/q_obj_f1b997dd-4400-4028-874a-02bcf20de9e4/display.aspx%3Frs%3Denginespage&usg=AFQjCNGtXCtFDMj8GW3wj1mNEmWusDbZ3A}}</ref> | |
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| ==Major combat phase==
| | There were also personality clashes and communications failures between Bremer and Sanchez. In the summer of 2003, COL Teddy Spain, the military police commander in Baghdad, could get no clear answer to "who is in charge". In theory, Bremer and Sanchez ultimately reported to Rumsfeld, but Rumsfeld generally assumed he reported to the White House. Spain said he would get conflicting orders from the CPA and from CJTF-7.<ref>Ricks, ''Fiasco, pp. 179-180''</ref> |
| As with any war, no plan survives contact with the enemy. Both sides did consider Baghdad the key [[centers of gravity|center of gravity]], but both made incorrect assumptions about the enemy's plans. The U.S. was still sensitive over the casualties taken by a too-light raid in [[Operation GOTHIC SERPENT]] in [[Mogadishu]], [[Somalia]]. As a result, the initial concept of operations was to surround Baghdad with tanks, while airborne and air assault infantry cleared it block-by-block. <ref name=Zucchino>{{citation
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| | author = David Zucchino
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| | title = Thunder Run: the Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad
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| | publisher = Atlantic Monthly Press | year = 2004 | ISBN = 0871139111}}, p. 3</ref>
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| The U.S. also expected the more determined Iraqi forces, such as the Special Republican Guard and the Saddam Fedayeen, to stay in the cities and fight from cover. Before the invasion, the Fedayeen were seen as Uday Hussein's personal paramilitary force, founded in the mid-1990s. They had become known in 2000 and 2001, beheading dissenting women in the streets claiming they were prostitutes. "It was a very new phenomenon, the first time women in Iraq have been beheaded in public," Muhannad Eshaiker of the California-based Iraqi Forum for Democracy told ABC. <ref name=ABC>{{citation
| | ==WMD assessment== |
| | title = Who Are Saddam's 'Fedayeen' Fighters? A Look at Iraq’s Brutal Paramilitary Group, the Fedayeen Saddam
| | In October, David Kay, under the direction of Tenet, issued a report saying:<ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', pp. 470-474</ref> |
| | author = Leela Jacinto
| | *Saddam had a significant history, capabilities and programs related to WMD; laboratories existed within the security organizations |
| | date = 24 March 2003 | url = http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=79602&page=1
| | *Saddam had no WMD stockpiles |
| | journal = ABC News}}</ref> They had not been expected to be a force in battle. It was clear that the fedayeen had minimal military training. They seemed unaware of the lethality of the U.S. armored vehicles, and aggressively but haphazardly attacked them. <ref>Zucchino, pp. 14-15</ref> Senior Iraqi Army officers seemed to believe their own propaganda and assume that the war would go well, and there would never be tanks in Baghdad. It was only Special Republican Guard, Saddam Fedayeen, and unexpected Syrian mercenaries that seemed to understand the reality.<ref>Zucchino, pp. 35-36</ref> In an interview after the end of high-intensity combat, MG [[Buford Blount]], commander of the [[3rd Infantry Division]], said "...there were many, I think, Syrian and other countries that had sent personnel; the countries didn't, I think individuals came over on their own that were recruited and paid for by the Ba'ath Party to come over and fight the Americans. We dealt with those individuals there for a two- or three-day period, had a lot of contact with them, but have not seen a reoccurrence of that at this point."<ref name=DLink2003-05-15>{{citation
| |
| | journal = Defenselink
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| | author - Army Maj. Gen. Buford C. Blount III | date= May 15, 2003
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| | title = 3rd Infantry Division Commander Live Briefing from Iraq
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| | url = http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=2608}}</ref>
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| There was great U.S. concern that the Iraqis would use chemical weapons once their forces passed some "red line" on the approach to Baghdad. Franks had a communications intercept that translated "Blood. Blood. Blood." This, along with the discovery of chemical protective equipment, put him on edge.
| | Feith believes that the finding of infrastructure supported the WMD justification for the war, but the Administration quickly got off-message with it and essentially changed arguments to democracy promotion. |
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| The chemical warfare did not materialize, but an unexpected surprise was that the Fedayeen and mercenaries jeopardized the supply lines to the advancing spearheads. To make matters worse, these irregular forces attacked with civilian vehicles, in civilian clothes, and from civilian sites. This unquestionably led to civilian casualties. It also forced the U.S. to assign forces that had been planned to hold ground or take cities, such as the [[82nd Airborne Division]] and [[101st Airborne Division]], to shift some of their effort to road security.
| | ==American civilian government== |
| ===Major units=== | | There was a brief period in which the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance was responsible for peace operations, but the responsibility soon passed to the #Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). L. Paul Bremer, head of CPA, told Feith he wanted to arrive with one key message: "the Ba'athists are not coming back." |
| Ground combat began with two [[corps]] formations, the Army's [[V Corps]] under LTG [[William Wallace|William "Scott" Wallace]] and the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (including British units) under LTG [[James Conway]]. At the start, the V Corps was primarily the [[3rd Infantry Division]] with supporting forces, but was steadily reinforced with additional divisions, such as the 82nd and 101st. The 4th ID did not deploy until large-scale combat was almost over.
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| The regular ground forces were under Coalition Land Forces Component commander LTG [[David McKiernan]]. Substantial [[special operations]] forces, both overt and covert, operated in coordination, but under a different component commander.
| | As the senior official, Garner was replaced in a month, on May 7, by L. Paul Bremer of the U.S. Department of State, although Bremer took control 9 days later. <ref>DeLong, pp. 124-125</ref> Bremer established the Coalition Provisional Authority, which was not well coordinated with the military. Garner had assumed a quick transition to Iraqi provisional rule. <blockquote>Bremer reversed Garner’s plans for an early turnover of political power and announced the indefinite postponement of the formation of an Interim Iraqi Government. Instead of a temporary Iraqi sovereign body, the CPA would continue to serve as the chief political authority and the Coalition armed forces as the military arm of that authority. This decision, in the eyes of many Iraqis, transformed the intent of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1483|United Nations (UN) Resolution 1483, which recognized the United States and Great Britain as “occupying powers” and urged the two powers to promote the welfare of Iraqis and to administer the country until Iraqis were capable of self-governance. The resolution appeared to formalize the sense that the Coalition powers were acting like occupiers rather than liberators, and this perception fueled the disaffection of some in Iraq.<ref name=OPII-II-IV /></blockquote> |
| ===Moves of opportunity=== | | ===ORHA=== |
| The "RUNNING START" began with near-simultaneous air and ground attacks. The original plan had been to conduct limited air strikes against border operation posts on March 19, along with infiltration, under air cover, of Special Operations Forces from the military and CIA, the latter designated the Southern Iraq Liaison Element. Full-strength bombing was to begin on March 21.
| | {{main|Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance}} |
| {{Image|Iraq planning print 2003.jpg|left|500px|Iraqi theater of operations}}
| | In April, Leonard Di Rita, a close aide of Rumsfeld, came to Kuwait and joined ORHA. Di Rita said State had mismanaged other peace operations, and this would be different, following Rumsfeld's "Beyond Nation-Building" doctrine. When asked by an AID official about reconstruction, he said "We don't owe the people of Iraq anything," Di Rita said. "We're giving them their freedom. That's enough," according to Packer. The U.S. wouldn't get bogged down in Iraq, Di Rita later told war planners at a major meeting: "We're going to stand up an interim Iraqi government, hand power over to them, and get out of there in three to four months," Di Rita said, speaking for Rumsfeld.<ref>George Packer, ''The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq'', ''quoted by'' Art Levine, February 26, 2006, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/art-levine/stuff-happens-revisited_b_16402.html</ref> |
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| When [[communications intelligence]] on March 19 indicated that Saddam might be at a location called Dora Farms, a contingency air operation went began on the 20th.<ref name=WaPo2003-03-20>{{citation
| | Garner waited in Kuwait, in early May, to come to Baghdad. The original plan had him arriving 60 days after the end of the war, with the initial preparation being done by CENTCOM civil affairs teams and engineers. The White House assumed the Americans would be welcomed. Rice had said "The concept was that we would defeat the army, but the institutions would hold, everything from ministries to police forces. You would be able to bring new leadership but keep the body in place." Under the changing situation, Garner saw himself in that leadership role, but as a partner, not director, of Iraqis. <ref>COBRA II, p. 463</ref> |
| | title = CIA Had Fix on Hussein: Intelligence Revealed 'Target of Opportunity'
| | In the PBS interview, Garner's interviewer asked him if his superiors wanted him simply prepare for Chalabi, a neoconservative favorite, to take over. Garner denied this was Rumsfeld's plan, quoting him as saying "I don't have a candidate. The best man will rise." Garner did say that Chalabi "certainly he was the darling of Douglas Feith|Doug Feith and [former Defense Policy Board Chairman] Richard Perle and probably ...Paul Wolfowitz, perhaps (Vice-President) Dick Cheney. I'm not sure." He said that he was prepared to bring back the Army, <blockquote>By the 15th of May, we had a large number of Iraqi army located that were ready to come back, and the Treasury guys were ready to pay them. When the order came out to disband, [it] shocked me, because I didn't know we were going to do that. All along I thought we were bringing back the Iraqi army. ... Why we didn't do that, I don't know.</blockquote> |
| | first1= Barton |last1 = Gellman | first2 = Dana | last2 = Priest
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| | date = March 20, 2003
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| | url = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/12/AR2006061200884.html}}</ref> Times were tight; the ultimatum to Saddam expired at 4 AM local time; the F-117 aircraft had to be out of the area before dawn at approxiately 5:30. They took off at 3:30.<ref name=NYT2003-04-25>{{citation
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| | date = April 25, 2003
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| | title = Back From Iraq, High-Tech Fighter Pilots Recount Exploits
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| | author = Eric Schmit | journal = New York Times
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| | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/25/international/worldspecial/25STEA.html?pagewanted=print}}</ref> Cruise missile hit aboveground targets at Dora Farms five minutes after the F-117's had dropped ground-penetrating bombs. Saddam, however, was not at the site.
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| [[Special operations]] forces were already operating in Iraq. Special operations forces (SOF) also moved into action, seizing oil and gas platforms in the south. SOF in the west positioned themselves to strike at airfields, missile sites, and suspected WMD facilities. In the north, they worked with the Kurdish resistance to pin the Iraqi forces in that area.
| | ===Coalition Provisional Authority=== |
| | {{main|Coalition Provisional Authority}} |
| | Bremer, before leaving with Iraq, met with Rumsfeld's staff, specifically being sent to Douglas Feith to draft the de-Ba'athification order. Feith said his staff had briefed Bremer extensively about the interagency work on de-Ba'athification, which had been approved, in draft form, by the President on March 10. Bremer asked for a delay, wanting to make he announcement himself. Walter Slocombe, who had drafted Orders 1 and 2 with Bremer, showed them to Feith on May 9. <ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', p. 428</ref> |
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| Iraq countered with surface-to-surface missiles fired at U.S. headquarters on the afternoon of the 20th. They were shot down. <ref>COBRA II, p. 178</ref>
| | Bremer did have some concerns about conflicting advice from James Dobbins, later a RAND Corporation researcher and a former State Department expert on peace operations#nation-building|nation-building. While Dobbins did not want to join CPA, he did point Bremer to a recent study that, among other things, suggested large peacekeeping forces were better than small ones. <ref name=RANDMR1753>{{citation |
| ===Special operations probes=== | | | url = http://www.rand.org/pubs/monograph_reports/MR1753/ |
| On the 19th, a Delta Force squadron scouted several potential WMD sites, and found no threat. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 330-332</ref>
| | | title = America's Role in Nation-Building: From Germany to Iraq |
| ===Shaping the battlefield=== | | | publisher = RAND Corporation |
| The main operation of the "shaping the battlefield" phase began with breaking through a 10km wide Iraqi defensive line, on March 20. This phase lasted until March 23.
| | | author = James Dobbins, ''et al.'' | year = 2003}}</ref> Dobbins was concerned that the Administration was dangerously ignoring lessons from the Balkans. While Rumsfeld had given a February speech "Beyond Nation-Building" that emphasized NATO's errors, Dobbins thought it taught much. In particular, using the same force levels as NATO had used would have called for 450,000 occupation troops. <ref name=BNB>{{citation |
| {{Image|Iraq2003 border drawing.jpg|right|200px|Schematic of border defense}}
| | | title = Beyond Nation Building |
| The major units positioned themselves for penetrating the Iraqi border. This was called crossing the "berm", although the berms (plural) were earthen walls that made up part of the physical barriers at the border. Note that a substantial amount of the barrier was in Kuwait. According to the U.S. Army history, much of the actual breaching was done by Kuwaitis contractors, who considered it an honor, but could also disguise some of the preparation as routine maintenance. <ref name=Point-I-Ch03-Crossing>{{citation
| | | author = Donald Rumsfeld | date= February 14, 2003 |
| | title = Chapter 3: The Running Start; On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom | | | journal = DefenseLink |
| | contribution = Crossing the Berm | | | url = http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/speech.aspx?speechid=337}}</ref> |
| | author = Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, David Tohn. United States Army Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group | year = 2005
| |
| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-3.htm | |
| | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref> Another account, however, said that the Kuwaitis were reluctant to plow over the defenses they had built, including an electrified fence; they arranged, in discussions with McKiernan's staff, to have contrators take down sections of their barriers.<ref>COBRA II, p. 188</ref>
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| Breaching the berms proper was separate from creating lanes through the defensive line, which was done by [[combined arms]] units, such as TF3-15, based on two mechanized infantry companies (Alpha and Bravo, 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry), one attached tank company (Bravo Company, 4-64 Armor), one engineer company (Alpha Company, 10th EN), and a psychological operations. It split into organized into two elements, one of armored fighting vehicles and one of wheeled vehicles.
| | Bremer believed he reported directly to the President, and, in his book, said that some called him the “American viceroy” in Iraq.<ref name=Bremer>{{citation |
| | | author = L. Paul Bremer|L. Paul "Jerry" Bremer with Malcolm McDonnell |
| | | title = My Year in Iraq: The Struggle to Build a Future of Hope |
| | | publisher = Simon & Schuster | year = 2006 |
| | | isbn= 9780743273893}}, p. 11</ref> At first, he was subordinate to the Secretary of Defense on paper, but had his reporting changed to the National Security Council in November 2003. |
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| The first combat by conventional forces, took at 3:57 PM local time, but south of the Iraqi border, between Iraqi vehicles and [[U.S. Marine Corps]] LAV-25 reconnaissance vehicles from the 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion. Marines began the actual attacks with artillery fire in the late afternoon, preceding the border crossing by the [[1st Marine Division]] under [[Marine Air-Ground Task Force#Marine Expeditionary Force|I Marine Expeditionary Force]] under then-LTG [[James Conway]]. The Division cooperated closely with [[1 Armored Division (U.K.)]] and the Army's [[3d Infantry Division (U.S.)]]<ref name=GS-Day1>{{citation | | The Coalition Provisional Authority took control on 16 May 2003, effectively taking over from ORHA. <ref name=CPAReg1>{{citation |
| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/iraqi_freedom_d1.htmp | | | url = http://www.cpa-iraq.org/regulations/20030516_CPAREG_1_The_Coalition_Provisional_Authority_.pdf |
| | title = Operation Iraqi Freedom - March 19/20 Day One | | | title = Coalition Provisional Authority Regulation Number 1 |
| | publisher = Globalsecurity}}</ref> The Army units were under V Corps. | | | author = L. Paul Bremer |
| | | date = 16 May 2003}}</ref> Its Regulation Number 1 designated CENTCOM for military support. “As the Commander of Coalition Forces, the Commander of US Central Command shall directly support the CPA by deterring hostilities; maintaining Iraq’s territorial integrity and security; searching for, securing and destroying weapons of mass destruction; and assisting in carrying out Coalition policy generally.” |
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| Lane-clearing teams were ready on the 20th, waiting for movement on the 22nd. While they waited, they were in chemical protective clothing, donning masks when Iraqi surface-to-surface missiles were fired.
| | It quickly issued orders for de-Ba'athification, and disbanded the Iraqi Army. It was advised by the Iraqi Governing Council, and worked in parallel with the Coalition military. On June 28, 2004, it was replaced by the Interim Iraqi Government. |
| | ====De-Ba'athification and the military==== |
| | {{main|De-Ba'athification}} |
| | Bremer issued more extensive de-Ba'athification orders than had existed under military government, dissolved the Iraqi military, and then handed the de-Ba'athification exception program to the Iraqi Governing Council. The IGC delegated it to a committee headed by Ahmed Chalabi. |
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| Lead Marine units first crossed the Kuwait-Iraq border and began an intensive attack on Safwan Hill, in Iraq just north of the border. <ref name=3LARBn>{{citation
| | The CPA started to create a local security force rather than an army, called the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps. CENTCOM developed a separate program for Iraqis that could help in their operations. |
| | title = 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion
| | ====Writing the Constitution==== |
| | author = [[United States Marine Corps]]
| | Bremer, in February 2004, still saw the major constitutional problem as the role of Islam. The working draft read, <blockquote>Islam is the official religion of the State, and is to be considered <u>a</u> principal source among other sources of legislation. This Law shall respect the Islamic identity of the majority of the people of Iraq, but guarantees the complete freedom of all religions and their religious practices.<ref>Bremer, ''My Year in Iraq'', pp. 295-296</ref></blockquote> |
| | url = http://www.i-mef.usmc.mil/div/3lar/History.asp}}</ref>
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| ====Oil fields==== | |
| The first Army unit to enter Iraq was the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment, part of the 3rd Infantry division, at approximately 1 AM local time on the 20th according to CNN, although Defense Department reports suggest the movement was four hours later. <ref name=GS-Day1 /> In either case, the attack time was accelerated due to concern over the Iraqis' damaging oil facilities. | |
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| When Marines seized the Crown Jewel pumping station in Zubayr, 10 miles southwest of Basra, they were concerned that machinery had been damaged, but the Iraqi managers said this was the normal state of the equipment; the Iraqi petroleum industry needed rehabilitation. <ref>COBRA II, p. 193</ref>
| | He saw the sticking point as the Shi'ite Islamist demand to reword it to have Islam as <u>the</u> principal soure, which was unacceptable to the non-Islamist members of the IGC, as well as to Bremer and his staff. Sistani accepted a compromise that kept <u>a</u>, but added that "no law contradicting the 'basic tenets of Islam' could be enacted." Washington approved this language, which he considered better than the language in the recent Afghan constitution. |
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| As the Marines moved into the Rumaylah oil field, British forces took control of the Faw Peninsula oil facilities, as well as the port of Umm Qasr. U.S. [[Navy SEAL]]s captured some of the offshore facilities. A U.S. Marine helicopter crashed, killing Marines from both countries. <ref>{{citation
| | February 29th opened with some Kurdish issues, which Bremer negotiated personally. |
| | title = Burning oil wells may have caused death of marines
| | #Block grants from the treasury which was resolved |
| | author = Andrew Buncombe in Kuwait City
| | #The role of their militia, the peshmerga; an earlier compromise was tabled |
| | date = March 22, 2003
| | #veto of the ratification of the constitution |
| | journal = Independent (U.K.)
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| | url = http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/burning-oil-wells-may-have-caused-death-of-marines-591987.html2}}</ref>
| |
| ====Attack on Talil Airfield and on Basra====
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| On the 22nd, the 3rd Infantry division drove troughly 150 miles into Iraq, halfway to Baghdad, to the Tal Airfield. The 3rd Brigate attacked the airfield with the 1/30 Infantry protecting the flanks and the 1/15 attacking the Iraqi 11th Infantry division in defense. The 3rd Brigade captured the Talil airfield after its artillery began shelling Iraqi military emplacements there. While the 1-30th Infantry protected its flanks preventing intervention by forces in Nasiriyah, the 1-15th Infantry Regiment assaulted the airfield inflicting serious losses on Iraq's 11th Infantry Division, which was defending the location. The 3rd ID used a bounding overwatch, where one brigade at a time would attack, covered by another. <ref>{{citation
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| | title = Operation Iraqi Freedom - March 22: Day Three
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| | publisher = Globalsecurity | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/iraqi_freedom_d3.htm}}</ref> The 11th Infantry later surrendered resulting in the capture of some 300 prisoners.
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| In parallel, 1st Marine Division drove toward Bastra, destroying 10 dug-in T-55 tanks with hand-held and HMWWV-launched antitank missiles.
| | As Bremer negotiated this, Chalabi introduced new and "draconian" de-Ba'athification policy. When this came to Bremer, he told the Kurds that if he helped them on the demands above, he wanted their support against this proposal. Later, Mowaffak al-Rubaie|al-Rubaie spoke for unity and got acceptance of the language about Islam. |
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| Eight miles south of Basra at a turnoff to Zubair, the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines Regiment took over an abandoned Iraqi command and control facility and used it as a field headquarters. The marines left this position later in the day as forces began heading closer to Basra.
| | As the constitutional wrangling continued, there was increasing intra-Shi'a agitation, with Muqtada al-Sadr pushing Iraq war, insurgency#Early 2004|militarily for power<ref name=Independent2008-04-11>{{citation |
| | | url = http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/warlord-the-rise-of-muqtada-alsadr-807698.html |
| | | journal = Independent (U.K.) |
| | | title = Warlord: The rise of Muqtada al-Sadr |
| | | author = Patrick Cockburn |
| | | date = 11 April 2008 |
| | }}</ref> as his rival, Sistani, pressured in the arguments over the TAL. Al-Sadr, son of Ayatollah Baqir al-Sadr, killed by Saddam, but not Sistani, believed they had authority for clerical rule under the doctrine of ''Wilawat al-faqih'', or rule of the jurisprudent. Ayatollah Sistani told Bremer that he could not accept the idea that a two-thirds majority in any three provinces could block the ratification of the permanent constitution, which he called a "Kurdish veto". Bremer was angry, and concerned that the Shi'a were about to overturn the compromises that had gotten the document to that point. |
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| ====Resistance by irregulars====
| | March 2 saw deadly attacks during the Shi'ite observance of Ashura; a three-day mourning period was observed. At 2 PM on the 5th, many IGC members wer ready for the ceremony, unaware of the tension; some, such as Ahmed Chalabi, were very aware and threatened to resign if the IGC did not sign. The Shi'a split, and the Kurds hesitated. Chalabi and al-Rubaie mediated after talking with Bremer. There was no compromise that day. Eventually, the Council convened at 7:37 PM. From Washington, Rice kept suggesting to Bremer that the Kurds be pressured to soften their position on ratification, which offended Sistani. By 10:30, the meeting broke down. Bremer told Rice that keeping pressure on the Shi'a and Sistani was high-risk, but it was his best judgment. <ref>Bremer, ''My Year in Iraq'', pp. 302-307</ref> |
| On the 23rd, the advancing forces ran into unexpected resistance from Fedayeen irregulars, which did not present a threat to the armored fighting vehicles, but caused a problem for supply lines. They also faked surrenders and used human shields. <ref>Franks, pp. 486-490</ref> Part of the Army 509th Maintenance Company, having taken a wrong turn and driven into the city of An Nasiriyah, were ambushed and prisoners, including Jessica Lynch, taken. <ref>{{citation
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| | date = December 5, 2006
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| | title = Op-Ed Contributor: When Iraq Went Wrong
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| | author = Tim Pritchard | journal = New York Times
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| | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/05/opinion/05pritchard.html?pagewanted=print}}</ref>
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| ===The first large thrust===
| | The Shi'a returned to Najaf to work with Sistani. Late on the 7th, Dr. al-Rubaie, an obstetrician when not delivering new nations, came to Bremer and said, "It was a forceps delivery, but we got what we wanted." Sistani approved. |
| After breaching the berm, it would take at least two movements to reach Baghdad; there would need to be regrouping on the 400 km drive to the north from Kuwait. The contingency of sudden collapse of the Iraqi leadership was always considered as a contingency.
| |
| ====The "darkest day"====
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| Some of the hardest fighting came on the night of the 23rd and 24th. One component was an unsuccessful deep strike by [[AH-64 Apache]] helicopters at the [[Attack helicopter#Battle of Karbala|Battle of Karbala]]. <ref name=CRS2003-06-04>{{citation
| |
| | page = CRS-36
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| | url = https://www.maxwell.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/crs/rl31946.pdf
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| | title = Iraq War: Defense Program Implications for Congress
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| | author = Ryan O'Rourke
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| | date = June 4, 2003
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| | publisher = Congressional Research Service
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| }}</ref> This was a pure air attack; the 101st decided to defer its originally planned near-simultaneous attack, on the 14th Brigade of the Medina Division, until the 28th.<ref name=Point-I-Ch04-101Deep>{{citation
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| | title = Chapter 4: The March Up-Country; On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom
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| | contribution = The 101st Goes Deep
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| | author = Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, David Tohn. United States Army Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group | year = 2005
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| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-4.htm#najaf
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| | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref>
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| ====U.S. Political factors====
| | On 8 March 2004, the CPA issued the Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period<ref name=CPA-TL>{{citation |
| LTG Wallace had given an interview to U.S. newspapers on the 27th, in which he suggested the war might take longer than planned, due to the paramilitaries and the weather. <ref name=WaPo2003-03-27>{{citation
| | | url = http://www.cpa-iraq.org/government/TAL.html |
| | title = War Could Last Months, Officers Say
| | | date = 8 March 2004 |
| | author = Thomas E. Ricks
| | | title = Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period |
| | journal = Washington Post
| | | author = Coalition Provisional Authority}}</ref> It created or schedules: |
| | url = http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A33955-2003Mar26?language=printer | | *Interim Iraqi Government to take power (from the Iraqi Governing Council on 30 June 2004. This government shall be constituted in accordance with a process of extensive deliberations and consultations with cross-sections of the Iraqi people conducted by the Iraqi Governing Council and the Coalition Provisional Authority and possibly in consultation with the United Nations. |
| | date = March 27, 2003}}</ref> According to Gordon and Trainor, Rumsfeld felt this was disloyal, and raised it to Franks, who expressed to McKiernan that he was considering relieving Wallace. Franks had unfavorably compared the aggressiveness of V Corps to the Special Operations forces.<ref>COBRA II, pp. 312-313</ref> Rumsfeld, however, denied he had read the interview, but warned Syria and Iran to stay out of the irregular fighting. <ref name=SST>{{citation | | *Elections for the National Assembly, preferably not beyond 31 December 2004, and, in any event, not beyond 31 January 2005. |
| | title=Rumsfeld warns Syria, Iran against involvement in Iraq war | |
| | author = Lisa Burgess | journal = Stars and Stripes
| |
| | date = March 29, 2003
| |
| | url =http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=14106}}</ref>
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| In his autobiography, Franks said he was told of the incident by his press officer, COL Jim Wilkinson, on the morning of the 27th, who said "a couple of reporters ambushed Scott Wallace when he popped in to visit General Petraeus at the command post." Franks said he described it as basically accurate from the perspective of a corps commander, but definitely pessimistic. Wilkinson described it as "A friggin' disaster, General. The takeaway is that we're bogged down and didn't plan this operation worth a damn." When Franks said this was untrue, Wilkinson said "perception is reality in the media. My phone has been ringing off the hook for the last hour. Everyone wants to interview you about Wallace's comments." Franks told Wilkinson to stay with operational truth, and he would talk to McKiernan. When Franks talked to McKiernan, the latter said he had warned Wallace, and Franks said "that's good enough for me. Scott is a hell of a commander. Tell him I love him and trust him."<ref>Franks, pp. 508-509</ref>
| | IGC President Bahr al-Uloum said <blockquote>We gather today for a great historical meeting in the spirit of brotherhood and true love that unites all Iraqi people. All the brothers, when they spoke, put the interests of the nation above all other interets. Let it be known that we came to this place and we are all one person today and one opinion.</blockquote> |
| ====Haditha Dam====
| |
| The Haditha Dam is a water and hydroelectric power facility 125 miles northwest of Karbala. CENTCOM determined that Iraqi destruction of the dam, could have an immediate impact on the fight by causing floods, and subsequent catastrophic effects on infrastructure when stored water would not be available during the summer. The assessment came from the Army Engineer Research and Development Center's (ERDC) TeleEngineering Operations Center in Vicksburg, Miss. <ref name=Haditha-GS>{{citation
| |
| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/iraq/haditha.htm
| |
| | title = Haditha
| |
| | journal = Globalsecurity}}</ref> A decision was made to use Rangers to seize it; Rangers had been held in reserve for seizing WMD caches or Baghdad International Airport. JSOC had made seizing the airport, in the event of a regime collapse, a major priority; airport seizure is a classic Ranger mission, and was especially significant to MG Dailey, an aviator. The 3rd Infantry Division, however, was confident it could take the airport more reliably than JSOC. LTC Blaber, the Delta Force squadron commander, had been told the dam was a high priority, possibly as a WMD storage site.
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| Isakoff and Corn suggest that the dam mission was an ad hoc assignment to the Rangers, who did not have a clear mission. Rangers made a parachute jump and seized the H-1 airfield on March 27. A tank company was then airlifted to them, and the combined force, the first time armor had been put under special operations, seized the dam on April 1. Once they had it, however, they discovered it was poorly maintained. An engineer, with limited dam experience, was flown in two days later and helped maintain it, along with the Iraqi staff.<ref>COBRA II, p. 333-335</ref>
| | Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani simply said, "For the first time in my life I feel like an Iraqi." |
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| ===The Pause=== | | ==Iraqi interim governance== |
| As opposed to the situation in the [[Afghanistan War (2001-)]], there was no meaningful Iraqi resistance that could be assisted by Special Operations forces, at least in Southern Iraq. The Kurds in the north were quite another matter.
| | The goal was to transfer power to the Interim Iraqi Government after the TAL was signed, but the process was not automatic. |
| | ===Involving the UN=== |
| | It was planned to have the UN envoy, UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, appoint the members, with the legitimacy of the UN. Unfortunately, there were Shi'ite objections to Brahimi, who they suspected as a Sunni nationalist. He had, in their opinion, not spoken strongly enough of Saddam's brutality, and a picture had been circulated of Brahimi smoking a cigar with Saddam. Bremer appealed to Sistani that no one group would be completely satisfied, but it was to Iraq's, and Sistani's interest to bring back the UN. On March 17th, there was a full Governing Council meeting, at which Bremer said "if the UN cannot help form an interim government, the Iraqi people will know who to bleme." Jaafari pointed out the Council had invited the UN back in January, and they accepted Brahimi's return. <ref>Bremer, ''My Year in Iraq'', pp. 310-311</ref> |
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| Instead, the Iraqi irregular Fedayeen were a real threat to the rear areas of the advancing forces. By the 28th, Conway described the main Iraqi military as in a deliberate defense. complemented by the Fedayeen.<ref>COBRA II, p. 310</ref> Wallace, McKiernan and Conway were all concerned with protecting their rear areas; McKiernan had released the the [[82nd Airborne Division]] and to V Corps, for rear security, on the 26th. <ref name=Point-I-Ch04-Securing>{{citation
| | Brahimi would become a key figure in the transition, arguably being in a better position than Bremer to negotiate terms acceptable to Sistani. <ref name=Slate>{{citation |
| | title = Chapter 4: The March Up-Country; On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom | | | title = U.N. Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi: Can he save Iraq? |
| | contribution = Securing the Lines of Communication | | | author = Chris Suellentrop |
| | author = Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, David Tohn. United States Army Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group | year = 2005 | | | date = 13 May 2004 | journal = Slate |
| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-4.htm#najaf | | | url = http://slate.msn.com/id/2100461/}}</ref> |
| | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref>McKiernan said that before moving north, he wanted the Republican Guard reduced by 50%, and the [[101st Airborne Division]] committed to rear security. <ref>COBRA II, pp. 307-308</ref>
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| ====New raid on Karbala====
| | Brahimi was not only controversial in Iraq; he was strongly criticized by Americans, opponents of Pan-Arab nationalism, about his silence, while Algerian foreign minister or an Arab League official, about Saddam's atrocities in the past. Fouad Ajami accused him of sympathies with Saddam's system: "Mr. Brahimi hails from the very same political class that has wrecked the Arab world..his technocracy is, in truth, but a cover for the restoration of the old edifice of power."<ref name=WSJ>{{citation |
| Having learned lessons from the first deep helicopter raid on Karbala, an attack combining more types of force taken against the 14th Brigade of the Medina Division on March 28. Rather than Apaches alone, and in a single mass, the attack helicopter route was prepared. First, artillery and fixed-wing fighter-bombers hit the Iraqi forward areas. The close air support (CAS) aircraft would loiter in the area, and the helicopter force would include an airborne forward air controller (AFAC). Four minutes before the helicopters were to strike, [[MGM-140 ATACMS]] surface-to-surface missiles would strike air defenses.
| | | url = http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108431652940408675,00.html |
| | | title = The Curse of Pan-Arabia |
| | | author = Fouad Ajami |
| | | journal = Wall Street Journal | date = 12 May 2004}}</ref> Michael Rubin had similar comments in the National Review. |
| | ===Security crises=== |
| | Both the Shi'ite and Sunni regions had significant escalations of violence, which presented the problem that forceful suppression by the US might cause a backlash for the new government. Bremer expected violence to increase in the months before transition. |
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| The Apaches split into two battalion-sized elements. As no plan survives contact with the enemy, the element planned as the main attack force found few targets, while the feint element discovered the main enemy concentration.
| | Brahimi threatened to leave over the potential bloodshed in Iraq War, insurgency#First Battle of Fallujah|Fallujah; Bremer lectured him about Muqtada as an equal menace to Iraq. <ref>Bremer, pp. 326-327</ref> According to Feith, Bremer was also worried that Sunni members of the IGC might resign if the Council were not given an opportunity to resolve the Fallujah crisis by negotiation. Feith acknowledged that Abizaid believed that Council-requested delays could cause a collapse of security; Abizaid also said the Iraqis "don't want to fight for Americans."<ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', pp. 481-484</ref> |
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| Both forces flew differently than on the 23rd, based on the "lesson learned" about ground fire from civilian vehicles. In each formation, one helicopter provided security to the rear and two to the sides, while the rest looked for main targets. They destroyed five pickup trucks armed with heavy machine guns.
| | Some have claimed that not only IGC stability, but to the sensitivity of the Iraq War, insurgency#Early 2004|American Presidential politics contributed to calling off the military stabilization of Fallujah. |
| ====Airdrop on Bashur====
| |
| On March 26, 2003, the [[173rd Airborne Brigade]] made the largest combat [[paratroop]] operation since the [[Second World War]]. Landing in the Bashur Drop zone, they effectively opened a northern front, diverting Iraqi forces from the main ground assault from the south.<ref name=Point-I-Ch04-173>{{citation
| |
| | title = Chapter 4: The March Up-Country; On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom
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| | contribution = 173rd Airborne Brigade Operations
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| | author = Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, David Tohn. United States Army Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group | year = 2005
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| | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2004/onpoint/ch-4.htm#173abn
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| | publisher = Center for Army Lessons Learned}}</ref>
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| It is not clear, however, that the Iraqis took this as more than a diversion, since they were reasonably certain that Turkey would not permit a large ground force to cross its border into Iraq. Supplying the 173rd was also a major challenge.
| | During the May 13 visit of Rumsfeld and Myers, Bremer was not optimistic about easy answers with Muqtada and Fallujah. Sanchez said he was running out of specific Mahdi Army targets, and they agreed that they could move to economic stimuli in the south, engaging military targets that interfered. Fallujah remained more difficult; Bremer was not pleased with the lack of initiative of the new commander of the Iraqi Fallujah Brigade. Muqtada, while allegedly seeking negotiations, also appeared to be trying to lure provocative attacks on holy places he was using. |
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| The 173rd did not see combat until April 10, when it moved into [[Kirkuk]], after special operations forces had driven out the Republican Guard and Regular Army. It did play an important role in [[stability operations]] in Kirkuk and other Kurdish areas. | | The broader issue they discussed was involving the new Iraqi government in security, such as giving them a voice in combat tactics and air support to be used after the IIG took over. He warned they "will want to show distance from us, and they ''will'' make mistakes." They would also want security for the January elections, which would be difficult with both the shortage of Coalition troops and some restrictive rules of engagements. |
| ====An Najaf==== | | ===Abu Ghraib effects=== |
| Karbala would still have to be taken on the ground, and An Najaf controls the approach to it. The city is along the Euphrates River, with several bridges across it. Highways 9 and 28 parallel the river; Highway 9 runs through An Najaf. On the 31st, as the heavy 3rd Infantry Division regrouped to hit the Republican Guard, the [[101st Airborne Division]] prepared to contain An Najaf. Within hours of attacking, the 3rd Battalion, 1st Brigade of the division had secured the airport for humanitarian operations and military logistics. The 1st Battalion took an infantry training center.
| | {{main|Abu Ghraib prison}} |
| | CBS News broke the Abu Ghraib prison photographs in late April.<ref name=CBS>{{citation |
| | | date= April 28, 2004 |
| | | title = Abuse Of Iraqi POWs By GIs Probed: 60 Minutes II Has Exclusive Report On Alleged Mistreatment |
| | | author = Rebecca Leung |
| | | journal = 60 Minutes, CBS News |
| | | url = http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/04/27/60II/main614063.shtml}}</ref> Feith said that Rumsfeld, who offered to resign over it, saw it having critical strategic impacts, and that he and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff GEN Richard Myers would deal with the matter. Rumsfeld told Wolfowitz, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff GEN Peter Pace, and Feith not to become involved in the affair. <ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', pp. 484-485</ref> |
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| An Najaf presented problems beyond the pure military, as it holds one of the holiest shrines in Islam, the Tomb of Ali, son-in-law of the Prophet and founder of Shi'a Islam. When forces from the 2nd Battalion, 1st Brigade of the 101st approached it, they were fired on by Iraqis inside. The battalion commander, aware of the cultural sensitivity, surrounded the shrine and used snipers against those inside, but would not send troops into it. <ref name=Time2003-03-31>{{citation
| | Bremer, with Sanchez, met with the IGC on May 12, beginning with an apology. Council members, according to Bremer, "regretted the Abu Ghraib misconduct, but most went on to criticize the Arab and international news media for having ignored Saddam's repression for years." Rumsfeld and Myers arrived on the 13th, and they discussed the frustration of difficulty of separating criminals who should be transferred to the Iraqi courts, and the true security cases. Suggestions including the creation of an Iraqi prisoner's ombudsman, putting Iraqi observers into field detention and screening centers, imroving screening, and reducing the authority of US intelligence to put indefinite holds on prisoners. The last was an action item for Sanchez. <ref>Bremer, ''My Year in Iraq'', pp. 351-352</ref> |
| | url = http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,439213,00.html
| |
| | date = 31 March 2003
| |
| | title = Squeezing An Najaf
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| | author = Jim Lacey | journal = Time}}</ref>
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| The overall operational concept was to contain An Najaf from the southwest and northwest and isolate from the north and east. This would prevent enemy paramilitary forces from interdicting logistics operations in Objective RAMS and position the division to prevent other enemy forces from reinforcing An Najaf. | | Sanchez also said the Council asked why the American press was not discussing Saddam's abuses. He said there was a wide range of responses. Questions from the council included whether there were Israeli interrogators there, what Intelligence interrogation/Catalogs|interrogation methods were in use. The council, accorded to Sanchez, did distinguish between abuse by guards and torture during interrogation, but expected there would be a worldwide call to response by jihadists. He said that the Defense Department had no clear public relations plan, and the situation escalated on a partisan basis in Congress.<ref>Sanchez, ''Wiser in Battle'', pp. 375-380</ref> |
| | ===Building the interim government=== |
| | Since meeting with the full Council was awkward, Brahimi set up conferences with himself, Bremer and Blackwill, with a "troika" of the Council's immediate past, present, and future presidents: |
| | *Massoud Barzani (Kurd) |
| | *Izzadin Salim (Shiite) |
| | *Sheikh Ghazi al-Yawar (Sunni) |
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| To do this, 3rd Infantry Division would capture the two bridges on the north and south sides, and then put blocking forces on the east and west. 1st Brigade Combat Team would take the northern bridge at Al Kifl. Due to a shortage of uncommitted troops, the brigade air defense battery, in M6 LINEBACKER armored fighting vehicles, a Bradley derivative, was reinforced with scouts and forward observers, and directed to rush the bridge. If they were lucky, they would take it; they were backed by a tank-infantry reaction force. It was needed.
| | Bremer had recommended that any new government should include ministers who had demonstrated they were doing a good job, especially those that were effectively technocrats. The real challenge would be the president and prime minister. He was also concerned about security in his last 60 days, and, through very private channels, requested more troops. This need became especially obvious when a car bomb killed Salim on May 17th. Ghazi stepped up in the rotation, and President Bush called him to offer condolences. Bush and Ghazi formed a quick rapport, leading to Blackwill and Bremer considering him for the presidency. |
| ====Five Simultaneous Attacks====
| | ===Prime Minister=== |
| ====Shows of force====
| | As of May 19, no clear Prime Minister candidate had emerged. Allawi was the first choice for Defense Minister, but he refused to serve under certain prime ministerial candidates. |
| Before attempting to take and hold Baghdad, several peripheral or demonstration operations were used as much for psychological as kinetic attack.
| |
| =====Baghdad airport===== | |
| A major objective had always been Baghdad International Airport. While the V Corps staff had thought the best approach to seizing it was by air assault by the [[101st Airborne Division]], while MG Dailey of JSOC saw it as a mission for his force, MG [[Buford Blount|Buford C. "Buff" Blount III]], commanding 3rd Infantry Division, felt confident he could take it. He directed the 1st Brigade, under COL William Grimsley, to move against it. 3-69 Armor was the lead battalion, under LTC David Perkins, covered by extremely heavy artillery fire. The artillery was thought to have broken the morale of the Special Republican Guard defenders. <ref name=Lacey>{{citation
| |
| | title = Takedown: The 3rd Infantry Division's Twenty-One Day Assault on Baghdad
| |
| | author = Jim Lacey
| |
| | publisher = Naval Institute Press | year = 2007
| |
| | isbn = 1591144582
| |
| | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=H8dhIVewvPEC&pg=PA229&lpg=PA229&dq=%22Thunder+Run%22+Baghdad&source=bl&ots=uNQQaIWD9s&sig=Vh4bYMSq4tmiz5bKrE4y0fYZjeM&hl=en&ei=BgRASr-tC-mwtger4bH8Dw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1}}, p. 194</ref>
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| The first Coalition aircraft to use Baghdad International landed there on April 8. It remained a hazardous airfield, but it was usable by military pilots with appropriate tactical air traffic control.
| | In the May 25 troika meeting, all supported Allawi for prime minister. They were concerned he might not be acceptable to Sistani, as too secular. |
| | ===Transitional issues=== |
| | It was important, in Bremer's view, that the Governing Council disband once the new government was in place. He could order them disbanded, but preferred to do it. He offered a proposal that they disband a day before the new government took over, showing a peaceful transfer, and offered to "sweeten" the idea by creating a paid National Consultative Council that would take the IGC members that did not join the new government. It was also agreed to add a few face-saving ministers without portfolio. They agreed to the dissolution on May 27. |
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| =====First Thunder Run=====
| | During this period, issues arose with Chalabi. A financial investigation, and search of his facilities, took place in late April. There was also a May 3 report from ''Newsweek'' that Chalabi was providing secret information to Iran. |
| COL David Perkins, commanding the Second Brigade, was concerned about a lack of momentum, and proposed a raid to MG Blount. <ref name=Clark>{{citation
| | ===Presidency=== |
| | title = Winning Modern Wars: Iraq, Terrorism, and the American Empire
| | According to Bremer, the TAL had not assumed that the Presidency would have an activist role, which Adnan Pachachi, clearly wanting the job, expected. Ghazni, whom Pachachi regarded as his protege, also wanted the job. |
| | author = Wesley K. Clark
| |
| | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=ck2pVSbYanYC&pg=PA75&lpg=PA75&dq=%22Buford+Blount%22+biography+Army&source=bl&ots=DHZNkR0Wze&sig=wzAsYFkts414fOCaUylHxrmsPaM&hl=en&ei=E2pGSuGkJ5W1tgfvnLm-Bg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5
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| | publisher = Public Affairs| year = 2003 | isbn = 1586482181}}, p. 75</ref> Blount agreed, and ordered Perkins to make a "Thunder Run" raid into the city proper on April 4. The raid used a battalion task force built around "Rogue Battalion", or the "Desert Rogues" of 1st Battalion, 64th Armored Regiment, under LTC Eric Schwartz.
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| It was a day that saw a surreal contrast between the announcements of the Iraqi information minister, Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, known as "Baghdad Bob", and the U.S. probes into Baghdad, called "Thunder Runs". Objectively, they were high-speed [[reconnaissance in force]] by U.S. armored columns, to which Franks gave that name after similar operations during the [[Vietnam War]]: "a unit of armor and mechanized infantry moving at high speed through a built-up area such as a city. The purpose was either to catch the enemy off guard ''or'' overwhelm him with force."<ref>Franks, p. 517</ref> A correspondent, perhaps tastelessly but not completely inaccurately, referred to them as "the longest drive-by shooting in history". <ref name=BBC2003-04-05>{{citation
| | Brahimi, on May 28, decided on Pachachi. Blackwill, on May 30, expressed concern about Pachachi's vision of the role. Rice told the CPA that either man was acceptable to the U.S. On the 31st, the plan was to offer it to Pachachi, but that assumed Ghazi would agree, gracefully, to end his quest. When Brahimi and the CPA leadership met with Ghazi on April 1, however, he said he could not withdraw, and left the meeting. Barzani was furious with the selection of Pahachi. |
| |date= 5 April 2003
| |
| | title = Analysis: US thrust into Baghdad
| |
| | author = Jonathan Marcus
| |
| | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2921035.stm
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| | journal = BBC News}}</ref> As video, from an embedded reporter in the 1-64 Armor task force and from an UAV flying above, showed armored vehicles on the highway, driving up to Baghdad International Airport from a different route than that taken by 3-69 Armor, the information minister claimed <blockquote>They are not near Baghdad. But if they are, we shall slaughter them</blockquote>
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| It must be understood that this was a short operation, lasting 2.5 hours, by a battalion task force. U.S. casualties were light but casualties, largely among ill-trained irregulars, were estimated as between 800 and 1000. Lessons were learned, including the capabilities and limitations of UAV and [[Blue Force Tracker]] for keeping higher headquarters informed. While they had moved down a seemingly high-speed highway, they learned overpasses were key chokepoints.<ref name=Hayes>{{citation
| | Brahimi called Bremer to tell him that he was "dumbfounded", but Pachachi had declined the Presidency. With Barzani still there, Bremer told Brahimi to offer the Presidency to Ghazni and "pray to God he accepts it." Barzani and the others, at that point, could only laugh. |
| | url = http://www.dodccrp.org/events/11th_ICCRTS/html/presentations/150.pdf
| |
| | contribution = Thunder Runs into Baghdad: The Impact of Information Age Command and Control on Conflict
| |
| | author = Richard E. Hayes and Kristi Sugarman
| |
| | date = 28 September 2006
| |
| | title = International Command and Control Research and Technology Symposium
| |
| }}</ref>
| |
| =====Second Thunder Run=====
| |
| Blount, on April 5, reviewed the result of the first Thunder Run, and considered if another one would contribute to his goal of keeping pressure on the Iraqis, while major troop movements were being prepared. He expected reinforcement of Highway 8 and more digging in by the Iraqis, and thought that one, or multiple, Thunder Runs would be good preparation for the expected eventual siege of Baghdad.
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| Perkins, at the brigade level, actually had a more ambitious, information-centric goal than division and corps, which saw the raid as another in-and-out operations. <ref name = Hayes />
| | Ghazi did accept, and, that afternoon, Brahimi, Ghazi, and Allawi presented the government to the world. They were able to announce that the IGC had agreed to dissolve.<ref>Bremer, ''My Year in Iraq'', pp. 371-377</ref> On June 8, the UN Security Council welcomed the new government with Resolution 1546. |
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| Overall division operations had taken control of the intersection of Highways 1 and 8, which controlled access both to the airport, and to the city, 18 km north. A new run would start from there, and also use all of the Second Brigade rather than a battalion task force. <ref>Zucchino, pp. 67-68</ref>
| | ==Transfer== |
| | While the announced date of transfer was June 30, security threats suggested that it would be wise to surprise opponents, and do the transfer on the 28th. It was agreed, and sovereignty passe at 10:26, Iraq time. |
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| The second "Thunder Run", on April 7, stopped on the Presidential Palace grounds.
| | Bremer flew out of Iraq, having videotaped his departure speech. It closed with "Long live Iraq!" |
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| ===Regime collapse=== | | ===Transfer of power=== |
| The Coalition had originally expected a house-by-house fight in Baghdad, and to be attacked with chemical weapons as they came close. Before the invasion, they had expected the greatest resistance to be from the Special Republican Guard, Special Security Organization, and Saddam Fedayeen. It was a surprise when the Fedayeen were among the first defenders, attacking the lines of communications. | | The Iraqi Interim Government was appointed, on 1 June 2004, UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, with the most input from the Iraqi Governing Council, and advice from Bremer and Ambassador Robert Blackwill, representing Condaleeza Rice, had significant input. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, the Iraqi Governing Council (IGC), which dissolved itself on itself June 1, had the most influence.<ref name=CFR>{{citation |
| | | url = http://www.cfr.org/publication/7664/ |
| | | title = IRAQ: The interim government leaders |
| | | author= Sharon Otterman |
| | | date = 2 June 2004 |
| | | publisher = Council on Foreign Relations}}</ref> |
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| |
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| Nevertheless, there was a disconnect between on-the-ground reality and the positions taken by Saddam's spokesman.
| | Bremer and Sanchez announced the actual handover on June 28, a deliberate early transfer to avoid disruption by insurgents. Allawi was Prime Minister and Sheikh al-Yawar was President. Feith wrote that the Allawi government did no worse than the CPA; even though it was primarily made up of externals, it had legitimacy. He argues that it could have been created fourteen months earlier, and the delay was the State-CIA opposition to Chalabi.<ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', pp. 494-495</ref> |
| {{col-begin}}
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| {{col-break|width=50%}}
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| {|
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| |- valign=top
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| ''There are no American infidels in Baghdad. Never!'' Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al Sahhaf,
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| ("Baghdad Bob"} <br />
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| |{{col-break|width=50%}}
| |
| ''I got on Fox News and said, "I know where he is, tell him to stay there for 15 minutes and I will come get him" because we were right outside the Ministry of Information."'' LTC Eric Schwartz,commander, TF 1-64, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, at the presidential palace, Baghdad | |
| |}
| |
| The main Baghdad operation, leading to regime collapse, was a completely joint effort, using ground, air, and maritime components. It began on April 7.
| |
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| V Corps was responsible for the main ground offensive, prepared by the "five simultaneous attacks" through the Karbala Gap. Its major elements were the heavy 3rd Infantry Division, highly mobile 101st Airborne Division, [[3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment]] and the light 82nd Airborne. The latter two were focused on securing the lines of communication and the flanks.
| | As Bremer left, a viceroy no longer needed, he was replaced by an ambassador accredited to the Iraqi government, John Negroponte. George Casey, a four-star general, took command of the strategic-level Multi-National Force-Iraq. Negroponte and Casey formed a good working relationship, different, however, than that of the United States Mission to the Republic of Vietnam. In the Vietnam War, the military commander reported to the Ambassador, but the military and civilian sides in Iraq had parallel chains of command. |
| | ===U.S. politics=== |
| | There was increasing domestic opposition. A Out of Iraq Caucus formed in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2005, but there was never a major antiwar movement as there was during the Vietnam War. |
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| Now in theater, the 4th Infantry Division, which was the most advanced division in the Army, reinforced V Corps.
| | ==Insurgency and communal conflict== |
| [[Image:Assault on Baghdad.jpg|thumb|250px|Approaches to Baghdad]]
| | {{main|Iraq War, insurgency}} |
| ====South and East==== | | A full-fledged insurgency was in progress by July or August, although there was not a public announcement. There had been specific warnings, certainly as early as May. Also in 2004, conflict on ethnic and religious lines were growing more severe. <ref name=Kilcullen-Counter>{{citation |
| Baghdad was not the only area of concern; I MEF and the British forces secured the southern oilfields by the 10th and Saddam's home area of Tikrit by the 14th.
| | | author = David Kilcullen |
| | | title = Countering Global Insurgency, Appendix 1 |
| | | date = 2004 |
| | | url = http://www.smallwarsjournal.com/kilcullen.pdf |
| | | publisher = Small Wars Journal}}</ref> |
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| ====Northern front====
| | In May, Gen al-Shawani, leader of the Scorpions and CIA-favored (as opposed to Chalabi), met with Bush, Cheney, Rice, Tenet and Card. He said <blockquote>Sir, I'm going to tell you something. You need to know the truth. Baghdad is almost surrounded by insurgents. If you can't secure the airport highway, you can't secure all of Iraq.<ref>Isikoff & Corn, p. 357</ref></blockquote> |
| Special Operations forces secured the northern oil fields on the 10th. Ramadi surrendered on the 13th.
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| ====Air operations====
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| The first Coalition aircraft landed at Baghdad International Airport on April 8.
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| ====Securing Baghdad====
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| Baghdad was effectively in U.S. hands by April 9. Deputy CENTCOM commander [[Mike DeLong]] said three factors made looting much worse than expected:<ref name=DeLong>{{citation
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| | author = Michael DeLong with Noah Lukeman
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| | title = Inside CENTCOM: the Unvarnished Truth about the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
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| | publisher = Regnery | year = 2009
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| | isbn = 0895260204}}, pp. 117-118</ref>
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| *Saddam opened his prison doors and let prisoners free; these were primarily "ordinary decent criminals" rather than dissenters; it added 30,000-50,000 outlaws to the confusion
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| *The "resignation" of the Iraqi police, which DeLong said was the most unexpected. He is unsure that the [[information operations]] campaign urging the military to disarm also affected the police
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| *The dissolution of the Iraqi army, both by its soldiers and as a political decision, putting large numbers of unemployed young men onto the streets.
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| ==Interim Military Government==
| | The CIA station confirmed Shawani's impression. Bremer said he saw an Iraqi intelligence service document, toward the end of July 2003, describing how to conduct insurgency, followed by three major bombings in August.. <ref name=Bremer-PBS>{{citation |
| On April 16, Franks declared the end of major combat,<ref>Franks, pp. 528-529</ref> and ordered the withdrawal of the major U.S. combat units. The CENTCOM forward headquarters in Qatar and I MEF were to be withdrawn. U.S. forces would be reduced to 30,000 by the end of August, which the U.S. believed was adequate. <ref name=Sanchez>{{citation
| | | url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/yeariniraq/interviews/bremer.html |
| | author = Ricardo S. Sanchez with Donald T. Phillips
| | | contribution = Interview: L. Paul Bremer III |
| | title = Wiser in Battle: a Soldier's Story
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| | publisher = HarperCollins | year = 2008
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| | isbn = 9780061562426}}, pp. 168</ref> While the fighting was in progress, he asked for a provisional government to be established, and LTG (ret) [[Jay Garner]] was named, and created the Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (OHRA). Garner had experience running humanitarian operations in Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War. Garner said that he always considered himself in a temporary role. He said that Franks had been promised a large number of constabulary from other nations; his immediate goal, before de-Baathification, was "...setting up to pay the civil servants and the police and the pensioners."<ref name=Garner-PBS>{{citation
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| | url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/yeariniraq/interviews/garner.html | |
| | contribution = Interview: Lt. General (ret.) Jay Garner | |
| | title = The Lost Year in Iraq | | | title = The Lost Year in Iraq |
| | journal = PBS Frontline | date = Aug. 11, 2006}}</ref> | | | journal = PBS Frontline | date = June 26 and Aug. 18, 2006.}}</ref> The large attacks in August were on the Jordanian Embassy, then the UN Mission, and then in the holy Shi'ite areas of Najaf. Feith considers the UN bombing, on August 19th, as the start of the insurgency. <ref>Feith, ''War and Decision'', p. 449</ref> |
| | ===Military organization=== |
| | GEN John Abizaid, Franks' deputy, took over the command, on July 8, when Franks retired. On the 11th, he stopped the troop withdrawal ordered by Franks.<blockquote>The operational environment in Iraq is fluid...in light of the current situation, [forces previously intended to redeploy will remain in Iraq until replaced by equivalent U.S. or coalition capability.<ref>Sanchez, p. 227</ref></blockquote> |
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| In the PBS interview, Garner's interviewer asked him if his superiors wanted him simply prepare for Chalabi, a neoconservative favorite, to take over. Garner denied this was Rumsfeld's plan, quoting him as saying "I don't have a candidate. The best man will rise." Garner did say that Chalabi "certainly he was the darling of [[Douglas Feith|Doug Feith]] and [former Defense Policy Board Chairman] [[Richard Perle]] and probably ...[[Paul Wolfowitz]], perhaps (Vice-President) [[Dick Cheney]]. I'm not sure." He said that he was prepared to bring back the Army, "By the 15th of May, we had a large number of Iraqi army located that were ready to come back, and the Treasury guys were ready to pay them. When the order came out to disband, [it] shocked me, because I didn't know we were going to do that. All along I thought we were bringing back the Iraqi army. ... Why we didn't do that, I don't know."
| | The original headquarters for Phase IV was Multi-National Corps-Iraq, based on the assets of V Corps, now under Ricardo Sanchez. |
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| Garner was replaced in a month, on May 7, by [[L. Paul Bremer]] of the [[U.S. Department of State]]. <ref>DeLong, pp. 124-125</ref> Bremer established the [[Coalition Provisional Authority]], which was not well coordinated with the military.
| | The headquarters for foreign military units in Iraq is now Multi-national Force-Iraq (MNF-I), which was created, under Sanchez, on 15 May 2004. On an overall basis, it reports to the United States Central Command, which also commands the U.S. troops in MNF-I. Other units report to their home nations, although there are a number of non-US commanders from the MNF-I Deputy Commanding General, and Australian, British and Polish commanders at division level. |
| | ===Perceptions of insurgency=== |
| | Abizaid used the term "classic insurgency" in a press conference in May, and was immediately corrected by Rumsfeld. As Abizaid told Sanchez afterwards, "Well, there's no appetite in Washington to use the word 'insurgency'. And, by the way, we're not 'occupiers', either. We're 'liberators'"<ref>Sanchez, p. 231</ref> |
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| CFLCC was redesignated Combined Joint Task Force 7 (CJTF-7) on May 1, but McKiernan's headquarters was replaced by V Corps, then under LTG Wallace. MG [[Ricardo Sanchez]], then commanding [[1st Armored Division (U.S.)]] in Germany, was promoted to LTG and given command of V Corps. According to Sanchez, Franks had not specified a specific Phase IV role for CENTCOM or V Corps. <ref>Sanchez, p. 171</ref>
| | Not all commanders agreed they then faced an insurgency. MG Ray Odierno, commanding the 4th Infantry Division, told reporters, on June 18, "this is not guerrilla warfare. It is not close to guerrilla warfare," and described the operations he launched as mopping up. Asked about it a year later, he said "I didn't believe it was an insurgency until about July. What we really thought was, Remnant."<ref>Ricks, ''Fiasco'', pp. 170-171</ref> |
| | ===The Surge=== |
| | {{main|Iraq War, Surge}} |
| | Security remained a problem, but the US could not do the job alone or stay indefinitely. In January 2007, President Bush announced a US-Iraqi agreement to augment the US security forces temporarily, to bring down violence to a level that the Iraqis could handle. |
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| Franks and DeLong recommended that only the senior [[Ba'ath Party]] leadership be blacklisted, on the assumption, much as with the Soviet Communist Party, that Party members ran most of the basic government services. Nevertheless, the Party was dissolved on May 12, and CENTCOM was faced with the job of creating a new civilian infrastructure. Garner said that he had protested full de-Baathication to Bremer, who said "These are the directions I have. I have directions to execute this..." <ref name=Garner-PBS />
| | ==Transfer of sovereignty== |
| | Full authority passed to the elected Iraqi government on 30 June 2009. Muqtada and the fighters in Fallujah were still active, and there were major acts of infrastructure sabotage. Iraqis, however, could begin to fight for an Iraqi government. |
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| | Thomas Ricks said that <blockquote>The best-case scenario is that Iraq isn’t going to look anything like a success to Americans. It’s not going to be democratic, it’s not going to be stable, and it’s not going to be pro-American. Ambassador Crocker predicts in the book that the future of Iraq is probably something like Lebanon today. Most of the other experts I’ve talked to consider that wildly optimistic.<ref name=Ricks-FPRI>{{citation |
| | | title = Understanding the Surge in Iraq and What’s Ahead |
| | | author = Thomas Ricks |
| | | date = May 2009 | journal = E-Notes, Foreign Policy Research Institute |
| | | url = http://www.fpri.org/enotes/200905.ricks.understandingsurgeiraq.html}}</ref></blockquote> |
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| ==Insurgency, Counterinsurgency, or Occupation, depending on perspective==
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| The headquarters for foreign military units in Iraq is [[Multi-national Force-Iraq]] (MNF-I). On an overall basis, it reports to the [[United States Central Command]], which also commands the U.S. troops in MNF-I. Other units report to their home nations, although there are a number of non-US commanders from the MNF-I Deputy Commanding General, and Australian, British and Polish commanders at [[division]] level.
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| {{Reflist|2}} | | {{Reflist|2}} |
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| | [[Category:Flagged for Review]][[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
The Iraq War was the invasion of Iraq in 2003 by a multinational coalition led by the United States of America. Military operations were conducted by forces from the U.S., the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland, and was supported in various ways by many other countries, some of which allowed attacks to be launched or controlled from their territory. The United Nations neither approved nor censured the invasion, which was never a formally declared a war. The U.S. refers to it as Operation Iraqi Freedom. Continuing operations are under the command of Multi-National Force-Iraq.
From the U.S. operational view, Operation Iraqi Freedom ended when the 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, the last operational brigade in Iraq, left in August 2010. [1] Six other brigades actually remain, but they are called "advise and assist" units charged with training.
This war is to be distinguished from the Gulf War of 1991, following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The Gulf War had United Nations authorization. Further, both these wars should be differentiated from the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-1988.
The war had quick result of the removal (and later execution) of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and the formation of a democratically elected parliament and ratified constitution, which won UN approval. However, an amorphous insurgency since then has produced large numbers of civilian deaths and an unstable Iraqi government. It has generated enormous political controversy in the U.S. and other countries.
It also changed the dynamics of the region. According to Anthony Zinni, [2], it produced the "first Shi'a Arab state in modern history." Earlier advocates of regime change in Iraq, such as David Wurmser, had proposed replacing Saddam Hussein with a government of Iraqi exiles centered around Ahmed Chalabi; such a government would be in close alliance with Jordan.[3] There have been constant questions of Iraq splitting along the ethnic and religious lines of the three Ottoman Empire provinces from which the British Empire created it: Shi'a, Sunni, and Kurd.
Sovereignty has been transferred to a new elected Iraqi government, with U.S. forces withdrawn from the cities. Security problems still exist, although they are reduced from the worst times of the insurgency.
- See also: Iraq War, origins of invasion
- See also: Iraq War, major combat phase
- See also: Iraq War, Surge
Rationale
There had been some sentiment, in the 1991 Gulf War, that the invasion force should have continued to Baghdad and overthrown Saddam Hussein, but most agree that would have been far beyond the UN mandate and the realities of the coalition. Nevertheless, there was increasingly strong pressure among American policy influencers, from the mid-1990s on, that regime change in Iraq was important to the overall goals of American foreign policy. The 1998 Iraq Liberation Act formalized this as a Congressional statement of direction.
The main rationale for the invasion was Iraq’s continued violation of the 1991 agreement (in particular United Nations Resolution 687) that the country allow UN weapons inspectors unhindered access to nuclear facilities, as well as the country’s failure to observe several UN resolutions ordering Iraq to comply with Resolution 687. The US government cited intelligence reports that Iraq was actively supporting terrorists and developing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) as additional and acute reasons to invade. Though there was some justification before October 2002 for believing this intelligence credible, a later Senate investigation found that the intelligence was inaccurate and that the intelligence community failed to communicate this properly to the Bush administration[4].
Factors Leading Up to the Invasion
- For more information, see: Iraq War, origins of invasion.
There was wide support for the view that Saddam Hussein's Iraq had a negative effect on regional and world stability, although many of the opinion makers intensely disagreed on the ways in which it was destabilizing. This idea certainly did not begin with 9/11, but 9/11 intensified the concern in the Bush Administration.[5] Nevertheless, U.S. military action against Iraq goes back to unconventional warfare during the Iran-Iraq War under Ronald Reagan, the Gulf War under George W. Bush and various operations under Bill Clinton.
Iraq had had and used chemical weapons in the Iran-Iraq War and had active missile, biological weapon and nuclear weapon development programs. These provided Saddam with both a means of threatening and deterring within the region. He also supported regional terrorists, but there is now little evidence he had operational control of terrorists acting outside the region. Saddam had attempted an assassination of former President George H. W. Bush.
The issue of non-national terrorism, however, took on new intensity after the 9/11 attack. Some analysts, such as Michael Scheuer, believe that many decision makers found it hard to accept that such an attack could come from other than a nation-state.
The Authorization for the Use of Military Force that gave the George W. Bush Administration its legal authority to attack Iraq did not specifically depend on a proven relationship between Iraq and 9-11, or a specific WMD threat to the United States. Both, however, were assumed.
Strategic preparation
Not all the planning dates may seem in proper sequence; this is not anything suspicious as some of the work was already in progress as part of routine staff activity, while other work was started by informal communications.
Even before the 9/11 attacks, regime change in Saddam Hussein's Iraq was a high priority of the George W. Bush Administration. According to This is not to suggest that previous Administrations had not been considering it, and had been steadily carrying out air attacks in support of the no-fly zones (Operation SOUTHERN WATCH and Operation NORTHERN WATCH), as well as air strikes (Operation DESERT FOX). Nevertheless, the priorities changed.
In part using the cover of the no-fly zones, in part using clandestine operations, and in part activities in areas outside Iraq, work proceeded in what is now termed Operational Preparation of the Environment. This includes Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace, Operational Preparation of the Battlespace, and logistics (military)|logistical and other combat support and combat service support.
Another change, in the Bush Administration, was an emphasis on not "fighting the last war". Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was a constant advocate of transformation, emphasizing higher technology, more flexibility, and smaller forces, rather than the large heavy forces that were optimized to fight the Soviet Union. This was especially true after early operations in the Afghanistan War (2001-2021), where large U.S. ground forces were not used, but instead extensive special operations working with Afghan forces and using air power. Every war is different, however, and the reality in Afghanistan is there was an existing civil war and substantial indigenous resistance forces.
Assumed links between 9/11 and Iraq
Late in the evening of 9/11, the President had been told, by CIA chief George Tenet, that there was strong linkage to al-Qaeda and the 9/11 attack proper. Tenet did not discuss Iraq in this context. [6] On September 12, President Bush directed counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke to review all information and reconsider if Saddam was involved in 9/11.[7]
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz sent Rumsfeld a memo, on September 17, called "Preventing More Events"; it argued that there was a better than 1 in 10 chance that Saddam was behind 9/11. [8] He had been told, by the CIA and FBI, that there was clear linkage to al-Qaeda, but said the CIA lacked imagination. [9] On September 19, 2001, the Defense Advisory Board, chaired by Richard Perle, met for two days. Iraq was the focus. Among the speakers was Ahmed Chalabi, a controversial Iraqi exile who argued for an approach similar to the not-yet-executed approach to Afghanistan: U.S. air and other support to insurgent Iraqis. [10] Chalabi had the greatest support among Republican-identified neoconservatives, but also had Democratic supporters such as former Director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey.[11]
One reason Wolfowitz pushed for attacking Iraq was that he worried about what was then assumed would be a large American force in the treacherous terrain of Afghanistan. Since he believed, although without specific evidence, that there was between a 10 and 50 percent chance that Saddam was involved in 9/11, he thought Iraq, a brittle regime, might be the easier target. [12]
On the same day, Bush had told Tenet that he wanted links between Iraq and 9/11 explored. [13]
While Tenet agreed there was a connection between al-Qaeda and 9-11, and that Saddam was supporting Palestinian and European terrorists, he said that the CIA could not make a firm connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq. While CIA continued its analysis, it accepted a briefing from a Pentagon group, under Douglas Feith, to share its ideas about an Iran-9/11 connection. This was presented at CIA headquarters on August 14, 2002. According to Tenet, while Feith's team felt they had found things, in raw reports, that CIA had missed, they were not using the skills of professional intelligence analysts to consider other than the desired conclusion. His attention immediately was caught by a naval reservist working for Feith, Tina Shelton, who said the relationship between al-Qaeda and Iraq was an "open and shut case...no further analysis is required." A slide said there was a "mature, symbiotic relationship", which Tenet did not believe was supported. Pre-9/11 coordination between an al-Qaeda operative in Prague with the Iraqi intelligence service had become likely; Tenet described this association, which was later disproved, He called aside VADM Jake Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, and telling him he worked for Rumsfeld and Tenet, and was to remove himself from Feith's policy channels. Later, Tenet learned that the Feith team was presenting to the White House, NSC, and Office of the Vice President. [14]
It appeared a matter of certainty in the White House, especially with Cheney, that a link existed between al-Qaeda and 9/11, and Iraq War policy assumed it. A February 2007 report by the Department of Defense Inspector General said no laws were broken, but Feith's group bypassed Intelligence Community safeguards [15] On June 1, 2009, Cheney agreed that the evidence shows no direct link, but the invasion was still warranted due to Saddam's general support of terror.[16]
W. Patrick Lang, DIA national intelligence officer for the Middle East, said
The Pentagon has banded together to dominate the government’s foreign policy, and they’ve pulled it off. They’re running Chalabi. The D.I.A. has been intimidated and beaten to a pulp. And there’s no guts at all in the C.I.A.”[11]
Reviews by Rumsfeld
CENTCOM had a contingency plan for a new war with Iraq, designated OPLAN 1003-98. It assumed Iraq would launch an attack as it had done in 1990. Rumsfeld had OPLAN 1003-98 presented by LTG Greg Newbold, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in late 2001. Rumsfeld believed the plan, which called for up to 500,000 troops, was far too large; Rumsfeld thought that no more than 125,000 would be needed. Newbold later said he regretted he did not say, at the time,
Mr. Secretary, if you try to put a number on a mission like this, you may cause enormous mistakes. Give the military the task, give the military what you would like to see them do, and let them come up with it. I was the junior military man in the room, but I regret not saying it[17]
Informally, Franks had called it "Desert Storm II", using three corps as in 1991, but to force collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime. On November 27, he told the Secretary of Defense that he had a new concept, but that detailed planning would be needed. [18] Franks told Rumsfeld, during a videoconference on December 4, 2001, that it was a stale, troop-heavy concept. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) Dick Myers, Vice CJCS Peter Pace, and Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith were on the Washington end. Franks intended to ignore Feith, who he described as a "master of the off-the-wall question that rarely had relevance to operational problems." [19]
Franks proposed three basic options:
- ROBUST OPTION: Every country in the region providing support; operations from Turkey in the north, Jordan and Saudi Arabia and Kuwait in the south, air and naval bases in the Gulf states, with support bases in Egypt, Central Asia, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria. This would allow near-simultaneous ground and air operations.
- REDUCED OPTION: A lesser number of countries supporting would mean a sequential air and ground operation.
- UNILATERAL OPTION: If launching forces from Kuwait, U.S. ships, and U.S. aircraft from distant bases, the air and ground operations would be "absolutely sequential" due to the lack of infrastructure to bring in all ground forces at once.
Franks wrote that during the Afghanistan planning, he had developed a technique that presented, visually, the tasks to be done ("lines of operation") and the country or resource that would be affected by these tasks ("slices"). It is not clear when he first drew this visual aid for Iraq, although it was part of the December 12 briefing to Rumsfeld; the version reproduced in his book was dated December 8.
Image:Franks slices and lines.png|thumb|left
|550px|Franks model, from sketch dated December 8, 2001 In this model, operational fires are strikes by aircraft, artillery, and missiles. Special Operations Forces operations are principally special reconnaissance and direct action (military); unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)|unconventional warfare involves both military and CIA guerrillas. Information operations, as a line, includes psychological operations, electronic warfare, deception, and computer network operations; politicomilitary and civil-military operations are doctrinally part of information operations but are shown separately here. RG and SRG are, respectively, the Iraqi Republican Guard and Special Republican Guard elite combat formations.
Rumsfeld liked the presentation. He asked Franks what came next, and Franks said improving the forces in the region. Rumsfeld cautioned him that the President had not made the go-to-war decision, and Franks clarified that he referred to preparation:
- Triple the size of the ground forces now in Kuwait
- Increase the number of carrier strike groups in the area
- Improve infrastructure
- Discuss contingency requirements with allies
Franks said the activities could look like routine training. He pointed out that an additional 100,000 troops and 250 aircraft would not fit into Kuwait, and more basing would be needed. Rumsfeld urged that it would have to be done faster "more quickly than the military usually works". The next step was a face-to-face briefing on December 27. [20]
Rumsfeld calls for new planning
Early warning of Rumsfeld's desires came to LTC Thomas Reilly, chief of planning for Third United States Army, still based at Fort McPherson in the U.S. While Third Army would become the Coalition Forces Land Component of CENTCOM, it had not yet been so designated, when Reilly received the notice on September 13, 2001. It used the term POLO STEP, the code word for Franks' concept of operations. [21]
On October 9, 2002, GEN Eric Shinseki, Chief of Staff of the Army, told staff officers "From today forward the main effort of the US Army must be to prepare for war with Iraq". [22]
In the planning process, there were two key areas of friction between the civilians in the Department of Defense and the military:[23]
- The role of the civilians in detailed operational planning
- Caps on the number and type of troops that would be assigned
Intensified overt operations
For a number of years, the US and UK had been patrolling the "no-fly" zones of Iraq, and attacking air defense sites that directly threatened them. On September 4, 2002, however, there was a 100-aircraft strike that expanded the scope of Operation SOUTHERN WATCH, doing major damage to the H-3 and al-Baghdadi air bases near Jordan. These were more general-purpose than strictly air defense sites, and degraded a range of Iraqi capabilities. [24]
Secret operations in Iraq
The Central Intelligence Agency, as well as military special operations, conducted a wide range of activities in Iraq well before the invasion. They included Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace such as adding intelligence collection, and Operational Preparation of the Battlespace such as destabilization and planning for using Iraqis in combat.
George Tenet, Director of Central Intelligence, had a major role in the decision to go to war, but also how it was to be fought. A lesson learned from Afghanistan was that "covert action, effectively coupled with a larger military plan, could succeed. What we were telling the vice president that day [in early 2002] was that CIA could not go it alone in toppling Saddam...in Iraq, unlike in Afghanistan, CIA's role was to provide information to the military...assess the political environment...coordinate the efforts of indigenous networks of supporters for U.S. military advances..." In February 2002, the Agency re-created the Northern Iraq Liaison Element (NILE) teams to work with the Kurds. Later, CIA officers worked to encourage surrender, but this soon proved impractical; the U.S. forces were so small that the prisoners would have outnumbered the invaders. [25]
DBANABASIS: Destabilization
At White House direction, the CIA had created a program, under the compartmented control system#Cryptonyms and pseudonyms|cryptonym DBANABASIS, for destabilizing Saddam. The deputy chief of the Iraq Operations Group assigned, by Deputy Director for Operations James Pavitt, to run the program, starting in late 2001, was John Maguire; the other, whose identity remains classified, is known as Luis. In the mid-nineties, CIA had found that a first coup attempt simply had gotten Iraqi CIA assets killed; Maguire had been involved in that operation, the failure of which he blamed, in large part, on Ahmed Chalabi. [26]
On February 16, 2002, the President signed a Finding authorizing ANABASIS operations. The Congressional leadership was briefed. As opposed to the 1995 plan, ANABASIS would involve considerably more lethal activities. When they mentioned, for example, destroying railroad likes, Tyler Drumheller, chief of the European Division, said "you're going to kill people if you do this." Cofer Black, director of the Counterterrorism Center, had said "the gloves are off" soon after 9/11; this was an example of that change. Again as with Afghanistan, the CIA would make the initial political contacts with the resistance groups:
- Kurdish Democratic Party headed by Massoud Barzani
- Patriotic Union of Kurdistan led by Jalal Talabani
Maguire's team entered in April, and met with both Barzani and Talabani. They met Iraqi troops who seemed eager for an American invasion. [27]
DBROCKSTARS: intelligence collection
In July 2002, a CIA team drove from Turkey to a base at Sulaymaniyah, 125 miles into Iraq from the Turkish border, and a few miles from the Iranian border. Turkey had been told that they were there primarily for collecting intelligence on Ansar al-Islam, a radical group opposed to the secular Kurdish parties, allied with al-Qaeda, and experimenting with poisons. It was based at Sargat, 25 miles from his base, at a location called Khurmal. The team was helped by Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
The supplementary assignment for the team, beyond Anwar al-Islam, was for covert action to overthrow Saddam. They had been ordered to penetrate the regime's military, intelligence, and security services. Confusing the situation was that they had Turkish escorts. Even with difficulties, they established liaison with a well-connected religious group, which access to the inner circles of Saddam's organizations, and irritation with the PUK. Their reports were to be identified as DBROCKSTARS. [28] By February 2003, the informants were providing significant information, including communications from Saddam's Special Security Organization. Air defense installations were confirmed and bombed. [29] 87 secure satellite telephones were made available, but, probably in early March, one asset was captured; 30 of the assets never reported again. [30]
Unconventional warfare
Franks also intensively explored the potential for military special operations, both direct action by U.S. personnel, and, as in Afghanistan, using native resistance elements. In particular, it was agreed that United States Army Special Forces teams could lead up to 10,000 Kurds in Unconventional warfare (United States doctrine)|guerrilla warfare, a number large enough to be effective but not large enough to threaten Turkish sensitivity about spillover of Kurdish nationalism into Turkey. [31] The usually antagonistic
KDP and PUK worked with Special Forces against units of Saddam Hussein's military at the start of the war, although [32] yhis was later to result in partitioning Kurdistan into KDP and PUK areas. There eventually was a unified Kurdistan Regional Government by 2008.
On March 15, a Kurdish group, with CIA technical assistance, derailed an Iraqi troop train by blowing up the railroad tracks, a more visible activity than expected by Washington. There were several dozen harassing attacks in Kurdistan, and a march by 20,000 protesters on Ba'ath Party headquarters in Kirkuk.[33]
JTFI: WMD intelligence
Separate from DBANABASIS was the Joint Task Force on Iraq (JTFI) in the Counterproliferation Division. Its mission was not destabilization, but precise intelligence on WMD. Valerie Plame Wilson was its operations chief. JTFI developed sources inside Iraq, but worked from outside the country. Isikoff and Corn wrote that JTFI felt accurate intelligence was important, but "Bush, Cheney, and a handful of other senior officials already believed they had enough information to know what to do about Iraq". Rumsfeld, Perle, Wolfowitz, Libby and Feith believed Saddam was the principal danger to the U.S. and "we know what we are doing." [34] They considered Saddam a greater threat than bin Laden.
Legislative authorization
Joint Resolution 114 of October 11, 2002 is the primary legislative authorization for combat operations, although some advocates of presidential authority maintained it was within the inherent powers of the Presidency.
Voting was not strictly on party lines. In the Senate, it was opposed by the Independent and some Democrats.
- Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii)
- Jeff Bingaman (D-New Mexico)
- Barbara Boxer (D-California)
- Robert Byrd (D-West Virginia)
- Lincoln Chaffee (R-Rhode Island)
- Kent Conrad (D-North Dakota)
- Jon Corzine (D-New Jersey)
- Mark Dayton (D-Minnesota)
- Dick Durbin (D-Illinois)
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- Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin)
- Bob Graham (D-Florida)
- Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii)
- Jim Jeffords (I-Vermont)
- Ted Kennedy (D-Massachusetts)+
- Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont)
- Carl Levin (D-Michigan)
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- Barbara Mikulski (D-Maryland)
- Patty Murray (D-Washington)
- Jack Reed (D-Rhode Island)
- Paul Sarbanes (D-Maryland)
- Debbie Stabenow (D-Michigan)
- Paul Wellstone (D-Minnesota)+
- Ron Wyden (D-Oregon)
|
The House also was not on strict party lines. Voting against were:
+ Deceased
§ Retired from office
° Now Governor
Theater/operational planning
Detailed planning by CENTCOM began while active combat was ongoing in Afghanistan, in December 2002.[35] At the time, GEN Eric Shinseki, then Chief of Staff of the Army, testified to Congress that the number of troops approved by Rumsfeld was inadequate. Shinseki, however, was not in the chain of command for operational deployment. Although the Chief of Staff is the senior officer of the United States Army, he is responsible for developing doctrine and preparing forces for use by the combatant commanders.
The responsible combatant commander was GEN Tommy Franks, commanding United States Central Command. Franks had already begun contingency planning. Franks discussed high-level concepts with Rumsfeld and his staff, and returned with alternatives. Once the broad theater-level concept was ready, Franks tasked his subordinate land, air, special operations and naval commanders to go to the next level.
Criticism by senior officers
A number of generals were highly critical of the plan or its execution, focused especially on what they considered the unrealistic goals of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, or on Rumsfeld's management of the occupation. [36] They include Paul Eaton, who headed training of the Iraqi military in 2003-2004;[37] former chiefs of United States Central Command (Anthony Zinni and Joseph Hoar); Greg Newbold, Director of the Joint staff from 2000 to 2002;[38] John Riggs, a planner who had criticized personnel levels, in public, while on duty; division|division commanders Charles Swannack and John Batiste.
Newbold regretted he had not resigned when the proposals were first made. Swannack retired two days after ending a command tour in Iraq. Eaton also quit his assignment in Iraq.
Major combat phase
- For more information, see: Iraq War, major combat phase.
Ground combat was directed by an intermediate headquarters in Iraq, based on Third United States Army, called Coalition Forces Land Combat Command (CFLCC) under LTG David McKiernan.
While the start of major combat is often stated as March 20, 2003, operations actually had started well before then. Special operations forces were in the country, and there had been a gradual intensification of bombing under the "no-fly" programs, Operation NORTHERN WATCH and Operation SOUTHERN WATCH.
A "running start" had been planned, and it was fully expected that the plan would alter with events, as it is a truism no plan survives contact with the enemy. Both sides did consider Baghdad the key centers of gravity (military)|center of gravity, but both made incorrect assumptions about the enemy's plans. The U.S. was still sensitive over the casualties taken by a too-light raid in Operation GOTHIC SERPENT in Mogadishu, Somalia. As a result, the initial concept of operations was to surround Baghdad with tanks, while airborne and air assault infantry cleared it block-by-block. [39] Iraq, in turn, both assumed a siege of Iraq, but, unknown to the Coalition, expected to use irregulars to harass the supply lines of advancing forces.
The Coalition did not expect to be able to reach Baghdad in a single bound; there was always an intention to make entry, regroup, and then make a final assault. Baghdad was not the only target; there were urgent needs to secure the oilfields against destruction, and to take control of the southern port of Umm Qasr. Kurds in the north were already semi-autonomous and wanted to take action; the relations between the Kurds in Iraq and Kurds in Turkey was extremely sensitive.
Baghdad was effectively in U.S. hands by April 9. Deputy CENTCOM commander Mike DeLong said three factors made looting much worse than expected:[40]
- Saddam opened his prison doors and let prisoners free; these were primarily "ordinary decent criminals" rather than dissenters; it added 30,000-50,000 outlaws to the confusion
- The "resignation" of the Iraqi police, which DeLong said was the most unexpected. He is unsure that the information operations campaign urging the military to disarm also affected the police
- The dissolution of the Iraqi army, both by its soldiers and as a political decision, putting large numbers of unemployed young men onto the streets.
Interim Military Government
There had been confusion on who was planning Phase IV, and there was even more confusion as to who would execute it.
"At the most fundamental level, many were not sure who was in charge of the overall Phase IV effort: Ambassador L. Paul Bremer (Garner’s successor) or the CJTF-7 commander. Military officers believed there was a clear division of labor between the military and civilian elements – CJTF-7 handled all military efforts, for example – while civilians believed CPA led the entire effort."[41] The bureaucratic infighting was worst between State and Defense, probably with involvement from the Office of the Vice President and the National Security Council. The role of the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, in such circumstances, is supposed to be collecting the positions and submitting them to the President when he is the only one that can make the decision. This did not happen.
While the fighting was in progress, Franks asked for a provisional government to be established.
Changes from the White House
Rumsfeld and the White House made rapid changes. The decision was made to bring in L. Paul Bremer|L. Paul "Jerry" Bremer, who had been Henry Kissinger's chief of staff, Ambassador to the Netherlands, and head of the State Department counterterrorism office. He had no Middle East experience, which Rumsfeld considered an advantage: Rumsfeld had rejected some of Garner's appointments because they were State Department Arabists who might not be sympathetic to the President's goal of remaking Iraqi society.
President Bush publicly announced the decision on 6 May 2003, 17 days after Garner arrived in Baghdad as the head of ORHA. The US Government never issued a formal order dissolving the ORHA. Some of its staff members, such as Meghan O'Sullivan. joined the CPA, and Garner returned to civilian life.[42]
Bremer, in turn, wanted full authority. At first, he was to share authority with Khalizad, who was the point of contact to Iraqis who might be in a full government. When Bremer's appointment was announced on May 6 by the White House, Khalizad had just been told he was not included in the solution, amazing Powell. When Powell asked Rice for an explanation, she said she had nothing to do with it.[43]
Force drawdown and command reorganization
On April 16, Franks declared the end of major combat,[44] and ordered the withdrawal of the major U.S. combat units. The CENTCOM forward headquarters in Qatar and I MEF were to be withdrawn. U.S. forces would be reduced to 30,000 by the end of August, which the U.S. believed was adequate. [45]
While regular Iraqi military units were no longer fighting, resistance by irregulars continued, first by Ba'ath loyalists, then random Iraqis objecting to an invasion, but then sectarian fighting among the Shi'a, Sunni and Kurds, and their various factions. A full-fledged insurgency, however, was not underway until July. Since the Iraqi police as well as the Iraqi army had dissolved, providing population security fell to the military, which was not organized for it, as, for example, the WWII Constabulary in Germany had been.
CFLCC was redesignated Combined Joint Task Force 7 (CJTF-7) on May 1, but McKiernan's headquarters was replaced by V Corps, then under LTG Wallace. MG Ricardo Sanchez, then commanding 1st Armored Division (U.S.) in Germany, was promoted to LTG and given command of V Corps. According to Sanchez, Franks had not specified a specific Phase IV role for CENTCOM or V Corps. [46]
De-Ba'athification, retention of Army and Police
- For more information, see: De-Ba'athification.
Franks and DeLong recommended that only the senior Ba'ath Party leadership be blacklisted, on the assumption, much as with the Soviet Communist Party, that Party members ran most of the basic government services. Nevertheless, the Party was dissolved on May 12, and CENTCOM was faced with the job of creating a new civilian infrastructure. Garner said that he had protested full de-Ba'athification to Bremer, who said "These are the directions I have. I have directions to execute this..." [47]
Resources from other nations
CENTCOM tried to get peacekeeping resources from other nations. The Administration preemption doctrine had assumed that while the US might have acted unilaterally, successful operations might cause allies to share the postwar work. The immediate operations were so confused, however, that this was never really evaluated.
Promises of a Muslim peacekeeping unit did not materialize. The Saudis did not want to be under U.S. command, and the US was nervous about the hospital they did volunteer, believing the staff might contain Wahhabist activists. The United Arab Emirates was not interested in policing the south.
India considered sending troops, in response to a request delivered by BG E.J. Sinclair, assistant division commander of the 101st Airborne Division. From the Indian perspective, reasons to participate were to be recognized as more of a great power. Reasons against included an April parliamentary resolution that the war was illegal, and a general question of risks and benefits for India. India is extensively experienced in peacekeeping, but always under UN auspices. The proposal was that it put its troops under US and UK command. Given the unpopularity of the war, what would be the Indian public perception of Indian lives lost, and Indians seen as occupiers, especially among India's Muslim population and in the Middle East? How would this affect US support of Pakistan, or would Pakistan seize the opportunity if India did not?[48]
Poland led a division, but of uneven quality. A Polish official, Marek Belka, was deputy head of ORHA. Poland does have peacekeeping experience, but not in this sensitive environment. It would get general assistance from NATO, but NATO was not itself going to be seen as part of the peacekeeping force.[49] The Poles also would command a Spanish force with restrictive rules of engagement.
A Ukraine|Ukrainian brigade was sent, but was of minimal ability; only the UK forces, with Italian and other NATO supplements, were effective. [50]
Security operations
CJTF-7 conducted operations to root out resistance, especially by Saddam loyalists. Operation PENINSULA STRIKE, on June 9-12, cordoned and swept areas of the Sunni Triangle.[51] Operation DESERT SCORPION, from June 15 to 19, swept the Sunni Triangle with raids based on targeted intelligence, and also conducted some humanitarian operations. [52]"These are highly coordinated, intelligence- driven operations," according to a V Corps spokesman. "These are places where we've been shot at, ambushed from and we have tracked the actions to these people."
Operation VICTORY BOUNTY went through the same areas on July 26 to 29, but Sanchez decided to reduce the sweep operations, in part innocent Iraqis were being taken into custody, and the custody facilities were overloaded. It was unclear how to treat detainees that were not clearly military, but he ordered, in June, for them to be treated under the rules of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Following VICTORY BOUNTY, he examined the Abu Ghraib and Khan Bani Sadh prisons as potential detention sites, but found the second essentially destroyed. Abu Ghraib was the only available facility, although Sanchez ruled that the torture and execution chambers had to be sealed. [53] It was not fully understood that the division commanders were doing little screening of detainees, which contributed to overcrowding. BG Barbara Karpinski said the 4th ID was the least selective, the 82nd Airborne the best, the 101st fairly good, and the 1st Armored would also send too many.[54]
While it is a danger to micromanage, some officers felt Sanchez had little overall vision and the various divisions had different styles. In the north, the 101st Airborne Division, under MG David Petraeus, was having good success both with security and nation-building, but it was also dealing with the more cooperative Kurds. Still, Petraeus was the Army's counterinsurgency expert and took a different approach than other commanders.[55]
The 4th Infantry Division, under MG Ray Odierno, was having a difficult time in the Sunni Triangle, and used the most force; a retired general at CPA said it fueled the insurgency [56] The 101st Airborne Division, commanded by MG Charles Swannack, was having slightly better luck closer to Baghdad. [57]
There were also personality clashes and communications failures between Bremer and Sanchez. In the summer of 2003, COL Teddy Spain, the military police commander in Baghdad, could get no clear answer to "who is in charge". In theory, Bremer and Sanchez ultimately reported to Rumsfeld, but Rumsfeld generally assumed he reported to the White House. Spain said he would get conflicting orders from the CPA and from CJTF-7.[58]
WMD assessment
In October, David Kay, under the direction of Tenet, issued a report saying:[59]
- Saddam had a significant history, capabilities and programs related to WMD; laboratories existed within the security organizations
- Saddam had no WMD stockpiles
Feith believes that the finding of infrastructure supported the WMD justification for the war, but the Administration quickly got off-message with it and essentially changed arguments to democracy promotion.
American civilian government
There was a brief period in which the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance was responsible for peace operations, but the responsibility soon passed to the #Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). L. Paul Bremer, head of CPA, told Feith he wanted to arrive with one key message: "the Ba'athists are not coming back."
As the senior official, Garner was replaced in a month, on May 7, by L. Paul Bremer of the U.S. Department of State, although Bremer took control 9 days later. [60] Bremer established the Coalition Provisional Authority, which was not well coordinated with the military. Garner had assumed a quick transition to Iraqi provisional rule. Bremer reversed Garner’s plans for an early turnover of political power and announced the indefinite postponement of the formation of an Interim Iraqi Government. Instead of a temporary Iraqi sovereign body, the CPA would continue to serve as the chief political authority and the Coalition armed forces as the military arm of that authority. This decision, in the eyes of many Iraqis, transformed the intent of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1483|United Nations (UN) Resolution 1483, which recognized the United States and Great Britain as “occupying powers” and urged the two powers to promote the welfare of Iraqis and to administer the country until Iraqis were capable of self-governance. The resolution appeared to formalize the sense that the Coalition powers were acting like occupiers rather than liberators, and this perception fueled the disaffection of some in Iraq.[42]
ORHA
- For more information, see: Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance.
In April, Leonard Di Rita, a close aide of Rumsfeld, came to Kuwait and joined ORHA. Di Rita said State had mismanaged other peace operations, and this would be different, following Rumsfeld's "Beyond Nation-Building" doctrine. When asked by an AID official about reconstruction, he said "We don't owe the people of Iraq anything," Di Rita said. "We're giving them their freedom. That's enough," according to Packer. The U.S. wouldn't get bogged down in Iraq, Di Rita later told war planners at a major meeting: "We're going to stand up an interim Iraqi government, hand power over to them, and get out of there in three to four months," Di Rita said, speaking for Rumsfeld.[61]
Garner waited in Kuwait, in early May, to come to Baghdad. The original plan had him arriving 60 days after the end of the war, with the initial preparation being done by CENTCOM civil affairs teams and engineers. The White House assumed the Americans would be welcomed. Rice had said "The concept was that we would defeat the army, but the institutions would hold, everything from ministries to police forces. You would be able to bring new leadership but keep the body in place." Under the changing situation, Garner saw himself in that leadership role, but as a partner, not director, of Iraqis. [62]
In the PBS interview, Garner's interviewer asked him if his superiors wanted him simply prepare for Chalabi, a neoconservative favorite, to take over. Garner denied this was Rumsfeld's plan, quoting him as saying "I don't have a candidate. The best man will rise." Garner did say that Chalabi "certainly he was the darling of Douglas Feith|Doug Feith and [former Defense Policy Board Chairman] Richard Perle and probably ...Paul Wolfowitz, perhaps (Vice-President) Dick Cheney. I'm not sure." He said that he was prepared to bring back the Army, By the 15th of May, we had a large number of Iraqi army located that were ready to come back, and the Treasury guys were ready to pay them. When the order came out to disband, [it] shocked me, because I didn't know we were going to do that. All along I thought we were bringing back the Iraqi army. ... Why we didn't do that, I don't know.
Coalition Provisional Authority
- For more information, see: Coalition Provisional Authority.
Bremer, before leaving with Iraq, met with Rumsfeld's staff, specifically being sent to Douglas Feith to draft the de-Ba'athification order. Feith said his staff had briefed Bremer extensively about the interagency work on de-Ba'athification, which had been approved, in draft form, by the President on March 10. Bremer asked for a delay, wanting to make he announcement himself. Walter Slocombe, who had drafted Orders 1 and 2 with Bremer, showed them to Feith on May 9. [63]
Bremer did have some concerns about conflicting advice from James Dobbins, later a RAND Corporation researcher and a former State Department expert on peace operations#nation-building|nation-building. While Dobbins did not want to join CPA, he did point Bremer to a recent study that, among other things, suggested large peacekeeping forces were better than small ones. [64] Dobbins was concerned that the Administration was dangerously ignoring lessons from the Balkans. While Rumsfeld had given a February speech "Beyond Nation-Building" that emphasized NATO's errors, Dobbins thought it taught much. In particular, using the same force levels as NATO had used would have called for 450,000 occupation troops. [65]
Bremer believed he reported directly to the President, and, in his book, said that some called him the “American viceroy” in Iraq.[66] At first, he was subordinate to the Secretary of Defense on paper, but had his reporting changed to the National Security Council in November 2003.
The Coalition Provisional Authority took control on 16 May 2003, effectively taking over from ORHA. [67] Its Regulation Number 1 designated CENTCOM for military support. “As the Commander of Coalition Forces, the Commander of US Central Command shall directly support the CPA by deterring hostilities; maintaining Iraq’s territorial integrity and security; searching for, securing and destroying weapons of mass destruction; and assisting in carrying out Coalition policy generally.”
It quickly issued orders for de-Ba'athification, and disbanded the Iraqi Army. It was advised by the Iraqi Governing Council, and worked in parallel with the Coalition military. On June 28, 2004, it was replaced by the Interim Iraqi Government.
De-Ba'athification and the military
- For more information, see: De-Ba'athification.
Bremer issued more extensive de-Ba'athification orders than had existed under military government, dissolved the Iraqi military, and then handed the de-Ba'athification exception program to the Iraqi Governing Council. The IGC delegated it to a committee headed by Ahmed Chalabi.
The CPA started to create a local security force rather than an army, called the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps. CENTCOM developed a separate program for Iraqis that could help in their operations.
Writing the Constitution
Bremer, in February 2004, still saw the major constitutional problem as the role of Islam. The working draft read, Islam is the official religion of the State, and is to be considered a principal source among other sources of legislation. This Law shall respect the Islamic identity of the majority of the people of Iraq, but guarantees the complete freedom of all religions and their religious practices.[68]
He saw the sticking point as the Shi'ite Islamist demand to reword it to have Islam as the principal soure, which was unacceptable to the non-Islamist members of the IGC, as well as to Bremer and his staff. Sistani accepted a compromise that kept a, but added that "no law contradicting the 'basic tenets of Islam' could be enacted." Washington approved this language, which he considered better than the language in the recent Afghan constitution.
February 29th opened with some Kurdish issues, which Bremer negotiated personally.
- Block grants from the treasury which was resolved
- The role of their militia, the peshmerga; an earlier compromise was tabled
- veto of the ratification of the constitution
As Bremer negotiated this, Chalabi introduced new and "draconian" de-Ba'athification policy. When this came to Bremer, he told the Kurds that if he helped them on the demands above, he wanted their support against this proposal. Later, Mowaffak al-Rubaie|al-Rubaie spoke for unity and got acceptance of the language about Islam.
As the constitutional wrangling continued, there was increasing intra-Shi'a agitation, with Muqtada al-Sadr pushing Iraq war, insurgency#Early 2004|militarily for power[69] as his rival, Sistani, pressured in the arguments over the TAL. Al-Sadr, son of Ayatollah Baqir al-Sadr, killed by Saddam, but not Sistani, believed they had authority for clerical rule under the doctrine of Wilawat al-faqih, or rule of the jurisprudent. Ayatollah Sistani told Bremer that he could not accept the idea that a two-thirds majority in any three provinces could block the ratification of the permanent constitution, which he called a "Kurdish veto". Bremer was angry, and concerned that the Shi'a were about to overturn the compromises that had gotten the document to that point.
March 2 saw deadly attacks during the Shi'ite observance of Ashura; a three-day mourning period was observed. At 2 PM on the 5th, many IGC members wer ready for the ceremony, unaware of the tension; some, such as Ahmed Chalabi, were very aware and threatened to resign if the IGC did not sign. The Shi'a split, and the Kurds hesitated. Chalabi and al-Rubaie mediated after talking with Bremer. There was no compromise that day. Eventually, the Council convened at 7:37 PM. From Washington, Rice kept suggesting to Bremer that the Kurds be pressured to soften their position on ratification, which offended Sistani. By 10:30, the meeting broke down. Bremer told Rice that keeping pressure on the Shi'a and Sistani was high-risk, but it was his best judgment. [70]
The Shi'a returned to Najaf to work with Sistani. Late on the 7th, Dr. al-Rubaie, an obstetrician when not delivering new nations, came to Bremer and said, "It was a forceps delivery, but we got what we wanted." Sistani approved.
On 8 March 2004, the CPA issued the Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period[71] It created or schedules:
- Interim Iraqi Government to take power (from the Iraqi Governing Council on 30 June 2004. This government shall be constituted in accordance with a process of extensive deliberations and consultations with cross-sections of the Iraqi people conducted by the Iraqi Governing Council and the Coalition Provisional Authority and possibly in consultation with the United Nations.
- Elections for the National Assembly, preferably not beyond 31 December 2004, and, in any event, not beyond 31 January 2005.
IGC President Bahr al-Uloum said We gather today for a great historical meeting in the spirit of brotherhood and true love that unites all Iraqi people. All the brothers, when they spoke, put the interests of the nation above all other interets. Let it be known that we came to this place and we are all one person today and one opinion.
Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani simply said, "For the first time in my life I feel like an Iraqi."
Iraqi interim governance
The goal was to transfer power to the Interim Iraqi Government after the TAL was signed, but the process was not automatic.
Involving the UN
It was planned to have the UN envoy, UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, appoint the members, with the legitimacy of the UN. Unfortunately, there were Shi'ite objections to Brahimi, who they suspected as a Sunni nationalist. He had, in their opinion, not spoken strongly enough of Saddam's brutality, and a picture had been circulated of Brahimi smoking a cigar with Saddam. Bremer appealed to Sistani that no one group would be completely satisfied, but it was to Iraq's, and Sistani's interest to bring back the UN. On March 17th, there was a full Governing Council meeting, at which Bremer said "if the UN cannot help form an interim government, the Iraqi people will know who to bleme." Jaafari pointed out the Council had invited the UN back in January, and they accepted Brahimi's return. [72]
Brahimi would become a key figure in the transition, arguably being in a better position than Bremer to negotiate terms acceptable to Sistani. [73]
Brahimi was not only controversial in Iraq; he was strongly criticized by Americans, opponents of Pan-Arab nationalism, about his silence, while Algerian foreign minister or an Arab League official, about Saddam's atrocities in the past. Fouad Ajami accused him of sympathies with Saddam's system: "Mr. Brahimi hails from the very same political class that has wrecked the Arab world..his technocracy is, in truth, but a cover for the restoration of the old edifice of power."[74] Michael Rubin had similar comments in the National Review.
Security crises
Both the Shi'ite and Sunni regions had significant escalations of violence, which presented the problem that forceful suppression by the US might cause a backlash for the new government. Bremer expected violence to increase in the months before transition.
Brahimi threatened to leave over the potential bloodshed in Iraq War, insurgency#First Battle of Fallujah|Fallujah; Bremer lectured him about Muqtada as an equal menace to Iraq. [75] According to Feith, Bremer was also worried that Sunni members of the IGC might resign if the Council were not given an opportunity to resolve the Fallujah crisis by negotiation. Feith acknowledged that Abizaid believed that Council-requested delays could cause a collapse of security; Abizaid also said the Iraqis "don't want to fight for Americans."[76]
Some have claimed that not only IGC stability, but to the sensitivity of the Iraq War, insurgency#Early 2004|American Presidential politics contributed to calling off the military stabilization of Fallujah.
During the May 13 visit of Rumsfeld and Myers, Bremer was not optimistic about easy answers with Muqtada and Fallujah. Sanchez said he was running out of specific Mahdi Army targets, and they agreed that they could move to economic stimuli in the south, engaging military targets that interfered. Fallujah remained more difficult; Bremer was not pleased with the lack of initiative of the new commander of the Iraqi Fallujah Brigade. Muqtada, while allegedly seeking negotiations, also appeared to be trying to lure provocative attacks on holy places he was using.
The broader issue they discussed was involving the new Iraqi government in security, such as giving them a voice in combat tactics and air support to be used after the IIG took over. He warned they "will want to show distance from us, and they will make mistakes." They would also want security for the January elections, which would be difficult with both the shortage of Coalition troops and some restrictive rules of engagements.
Abu Ghraib effects
- For more information, see: Abu Ghraib prison.
CBS News broke the Abu Ghraib prison photographs in late April.[77] Feith said that Rumsfeld, who offered to resign over it, saw it having critical strategic impacts, and that he and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff GEN Richard Myers would deal with the matter. Rumsfeld told Wolfowitz, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff GEN Peter Pace, and Feith not to become involved in the affair. [78]
Bremer, with Sanchez, met with the IGC on May 12, beginning with an apology. Council members, according to Bremer, "regretted the Abu Ghraib misconduct, but most went on to criticize the Arab and international news media for having ignored Saddam's repression for years." Rumsfeld and Myers arrived on the 13th, and they discussed the frustration of difficulty of separating criminals who should be transferred to the Iraqi courts, and the true security cases. Suggestions including the creation of an Iraqi prisoner's ombudsman, putting Iraqi observers into field detention and screening centers, imroving screening, and reducing the authority of US intelligence to put indefinite holds on prisoners. The last was an action item for Sanchez. [79]
Sanchez also said the Council asked why the American press was not discussing Saddam's abuses. He said there was a wide range of responses. Questions from the council included whether there were Israeli interrogators there, what Intelligence interrogation/Catalogs|interrogation methods were in use. The council, accorded to Sanchez, did distinguish between abuse by guards and torture during interrogation, but expected there would be a worldwide call to response by jihadists. He said that the Defense Department had no clear public relations plan, and the situation escalated on a partisan basis in Congress.[80]
Building the interim government
Since meeting with the full Council was awkward, Brahimi set up conferences with himself, Bremer and Blackwill, with a "troika" of the Council's immediate past, present, and future presidents:
- Massoud Barzani (Kurd)
- Izzadin Salim (Shiite)
- Sheikh Ghazi al-Yawar (Sunni)
Bremer had recommended that any new government should include ministers who had demonstrated they were doing a good job, especially those that were effectively technocrats. The real challenge would be the president and prime minister. He was also concerned about security in his last 60 days, and, through very private channels, requested more troops. This need became especially obvious when a car bomb killed Salim on May 17th. Ghazi stepped up in the rotation, and President Bush called him to offer condolences. Bush and Ghazi formed a quick rapport, leading to Blackwill and Bremer considering him for the presidency.
Prime Minister
As of May 19, no clear Prime Minister candidate had emerged. Allawi was the first choice for Defense Minister, but he refused to serve under certain prime ministerial candidates.
In the May 25 troika meeting, all supported Allawi for prime minister. They were concerned he might not be acceptable to Sistani, as too secular.
Transitional issues
It was important, in Bremer's view, that the Governing Council disband once the new government was in place. He could order them disbanded, but preferred to do it. He offered a proposal that they disband a day before the new government took over, showing a peaceful transfer, and offered to "sweeten" the idea by creating a paid National Consultative Council that would take the IGC members that did not join the new government. It was also agreed to add a few face-saving ministers without portfolio. They agreed to the dissolution on May 27.
During this period, issues arose with Chalabi. A financial investigation, and search of his facilities, took place in late April. There was also a May 3 report from Newsweek that Chalabi was providing secret information to Iran.
Presidency
According to Bremer, the TAL had not assumed that the Presidency would have an activist role, which Adnan Pachachi, clearly wanting the job, expected. Ghazni, whom Pachachi regarded as his protege, also wanted the job.
Brahimi, on May 28, decided on Pachachi. Blackwill, on May 30, expressed concern about Pachachi's vision of the role. Rice told the CPA that either man was acceptable to the U.S. On the 31st, the plan was to offer it to Pachachi, but that assumed Ghazi would agree, gracefully, to end his quest. When Brahimi and the CPA leadership met with Ghazi on April 1, however, he said he could not withdraw, and left the meeting. Barzani was furious with the selection of Pahachi.
Brahimi called Bremer to tell him that he was "dumbfounded", but Pachachi had declined the Presidency. With Barzani still there, Bremer told Brahimi to offer the Presidency to Ghazni and "pray to God he accepts it." Barzani and the others, at that point, could only laugh.
Ghazi did accept, and, that afternoon, Brahimi, Ghazi, and Allawi presented the government to the world. They were able to announce that the IGC had agreed to dissolve.[81] On June 8, the UN Security Council welcomed the new government with Resolution 1546.
Transfer
While the announced date of transfer was June 30, security threats suggested that it would be wise to surprise opponents, and do the transfer on the 28th. It was agreed, and sovereignty passe at 10:26, Iraq time.
Bremer flew out of Iraq, having videotaped his departure speech. It closed with "Long live Iraq!"
Transfer of power
The Iraqi Interim Government was appointed, on 1 June 2004, UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, with the most input from the Iraqi Governing Council, and advice from Bremer and Ambassador Robert Blackwill, representing Condaleeza Rice, had significant input. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, the Iraqi Governing Council (IGC), which dissolved itself on itself June 1, had the most influence.[82]
Bremer and Sanchez announced the actual handover on June 28, a deliberate early transfer to avoid disruption by insurgents. Allawi was Prime Minister and Sheikh al-Yawar was President. Feith wrote that the Allawi government did no worse than the CPA; even though it was primarily made up of externals, it had legitimacy. He argues that it could have been created fourteen months earlier, and the delay was the State-CIA opposition to Chalabi.[83]
As Bremer left, a viceroy no longer needed, he was replaced by an ambassador accredited to the Iraqi government, John Negroponte. George Casey, a four-star general, took command of the strategic-level Multi-National Force-Iraq. Negroponte and Casey formed a good working relationship, different, however, than that of the United States Mission to the Republic of Vietnam. In the Vietnam War, the military commander reported to the Ambassador, but the military and civilian sides in Iraq had parallel chains of command.
U.S. politics
There was increasing domestic opposition. A Out of Iraq Caucus formed in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2005, but there was never a major antiwar movement as there was during the Vietnam War.
Insurgency and communal conflict
- For more information, see: Iraq War, insurgency.
A full-fledged insurgency was in progress by July or August, although there was not a public announcement. There had been specific warnings, certainly as early as May. Also in 2004, conflict on ethnic and religious lines were growing more severe. [84]
In May, Gen al-Shawani, leader of the Scorpions and CIA-favored (as opposed to Chalabi), met with Bush, Cheney, Rice, Tenet and Card. He said Sir, I'm going to tell you something. You need to know the truth. Baghdad is almost surrounded by insurgents. If you can't secure the airport highway, you can't secure all of Iraq.[85]
The CIA station confirmed Shawani's impression. Bremer said he saw an Iraqi intelligence service document, toward the end of July 2003, describing how to conduct insurgency, followed by three major bombings in August.. [86] The large attacks in August were on the Jordanian Embassy, then the UN Mission, and then in the holy Shi'ite areas of Najaf. Feith considers the UN bombing, on August 19th, as the start of the insurgency. [87]
Military organization
GEN John Abizaid, Franks' deputy, took over the command, on July 8, when Franks retired. On the 11th, he stopped the troop withdrawal ordered by Franks.The operational environment in Iraq is fluid...in light of the current situation, [forces previously intended to redeploy will remain in Iraq until replaced by equivalent U.S. or coalition capability.[88]
The original headquarters for Phase IV was Multi-National Corps-Iraq, based on the assets of V Corps, now under Ricardo Sanchez.
The headquarters for foreign military units in Iraq is now Multi-national Force-Iraq (MNF-I), which was created, under Sanchez, on 15 May 2004. On an overall basis, it reports to the United States Central Command, which also commands the U.S. troops in MNF-I. Other units report to their home nations, although there are a number of non-US commanders from the MNF-I Deputy Commanding General, and Australian, British and Polish commanders at division level.
Perceptions of insurgency
Abizaid used the term "classic insurgency" in a press conference in May, and was immediately corrected by Rumsfeld. As Abizaid told Sanchez afterwards, "Well, there's no appetite in Washington to use the word 'insurgency'. And, by the way, we're not 'occupiers', either. We're 'liberators'"[89]
Not all commanders agreed they then faced an insurgency. MG Ray Odierno, commanding the 4th Infantry Division, told reporters, on June 18, "this is not guerrilla warfare. It is not close to guerrilla warfare," and described the operations he launched as mopping up. Asked about it a year later, he said "I didn't believe it was an insurgency until about July. What we really thought was, Remnant."[90]
The Surge
- For more information, see: Iraq War, Surge.
Security remained a problem, but the US could not do the job alone or stay indefinitely. In January 2007, President Bush announced a US-Iraqi agreement to augment the US security forces temporarily, to bring down violence to a level that the Iraqis could handle.
Transfer of sovereignty
Full authority passed to the elected Iraqi government on 30 June 2009. Muqtada and the fighters in Fallujah were still active, and there were major acts of infrastructure sabotage. Iraqis, however, could begin to fight for an Iraqi government.
Thomas Ricks said that The best-case scenario is that Iraq isn’t going to look anything like a success to Americans. It’s not going to be democratic, it’s not going to be stable, and it’s not going to be pro-American. Ambassador Crocker predicts in the book that the future of Iraq is probably something like Lebanon today. Most of the other experts I’ve talked to consider that wildly optimistic.[91]
References
- ↑ Ernesto Londoño (19 August 2010), "Operation Iraqi Freedom ends as last combat soldiers leave Baghdad", Washington Post
- ↑ Presentation at the Brookings Institution National Security Seminar, November 2001, as recorded by David Kilcullen
- ↑ David Wurmser (1999), Tyranny's Ally: America's Failure to Defeat Saddam Hussein, American Enterprise Institute, p. 80
- ↑ United States Senate (July 7, 2004), Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community's Prewar Intelligence Assessments on Iraq
- ↑ Douglas J. Feith (2008), War and Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terrorism, Harper, ISBN 9780060899738, pp. 215-216
- ↑ George Tenet with Bill Harlow (2007), At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA, Harpercollins, ISBN 9780061147784, p. 169
- ↑ Richard Clarke (2004), Against all Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror, Free Press, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0743260244, p. 31
- ↑ Michael Isikoff, David Corn (2006), HUBRIS: the Inside Story of Spin, Scandal and the Selling of the Iraq War, Crown/Random house, ISBN 0307346811, p. 80
- ↑ Isikoff and Corn, p. 108
- ↑ Michael R. Gordon, Bernard E. Trainor (2006), COBRA II: the inside story of the invasion and occupation of Iraq, Pantheon, ISBN 0375422625, p. 27
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Seymour Hersh (May 12, 2003), "Annals of National Security, Selective Intelligence: Donald Rumsfeld has his own special sources. Are they reliable?", New Yorker
- ↑ Woodward, p. 26
- ↑ Ron Suskind (2006), The one percent doctrine: deep inside America's pursuit of its enemies since 9/11, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 0743271092, pp. 19-20
- ↑ Tenet, pp. 346-348
- ↑ David S. Cloud and Mark Mazzetti (February 9, 2007), "Prewar Intelligence Unit at Pentagon Is Criticized", New York Times
- ↑ "Cheney: No link between Saddam Hussein, 9/11", CNN, June 1, 2009
- ↑ COBRA II, p. 4
- ↑ Franks, Tommy & Malcolm McConnell (2004), American Soldier, Regan, p. 315
- ↑ Franks, p. 331
- ↑ Franks, pp. 340-345
- ↑ COBRA II, pp. 19-20
- ↑ Gregory Fontenot, E. J. Degen, David Tohn. United States Army Operation Iraqi Freedom Study Group (2005), Chapter 2: Prepare, Mobilize, and Deploy, On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Center for Army Lessons Learned
- ↑ Thomas E. Ricks (2006), FIASCO: the American Military Adventure in Iraq, Penguin, ISBN 159320103X, p. 41
- ↑ Yossef Bodansky (2004), The Secret History of the Iraq War, Regan/Harpercollins, ISBN 0060736798, p. 46
- ↑ Tenet, pp. 385-387
- ↑ Isikoff and Corn, pp. 6-8
- ↑ Isikoff and Corn, pp. 9-10
- ↑ Woodward, pp. 140-144
- ↑ Woodward, pp. 302-306
- ↑ Woodward, pp. 335-337
- ↑ Woodward, p. 75
- ↑ Field Manual 3-05.130, Army Special Operations Forces: Unconventional Warfare, Department of the Army, September 2008, pp. 6-2 to 6-3
- ↑ Woodward, pp. 349-351
- ↑ Isikoff and Corn, pp. 15-17
- ↑ Franks, pp. 329-335
- ↑ Deary, David S. (February 23, 2007), Six against the Secretary: the Retired Generals and Donald Rumsfeld, Air War College
- ↑ Paul Eaton (19 March 2006), "For his failures, Rumsfeld must go", New York Times
- ↑ Greg Newbold (9 April 2006), "Why Iraq Was a Mistake", Time
- ↑ David Zucchino (2004), Thunder Run: the Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad, Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN 0871139111, p. 3
- ↑ Michael DeLong with Noah Lukeman (2009), Inside CENTCOM: the Unvarnished Truth about the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Regnery, ISBN 0895260204, pp. 117-118
- ↑ Julio Arana, Jonathan M. Owens, David Wrubel (25 August 2006), Strengthening the Interagency Process:The Case for Enhancing the Role of the National Security Advisor, Joint Forces Staff College, pp. 13-14
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 Donald P. Wright, Timothy R. Reese with the Contemporary Operations Study Team, Part II, Transition to a New Campaign; Chapter 4: Leading the New Campaign: Transitions in Command and Control in Operation Iraqi Freedom, ON POINT II: Transition to the New Campaign; The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom May 2003-January 2005
- ↑ COBRA II, pp. 475-476
- ↑ Franks, pp. 528-529
- ↑ Ricardo S. Sanchez with Donald T. Phillips (2008), Wiser in Battle: a Soldier's Story, HarperCollins, ISBN 9780061562426, p. 168
- ↑ Sanchez, p. 171
- ↑ "The Lost Year in Iraq: Interview, Lt. Gen. (retired) Jay Garner", PBS Frontline, 11 August 2006
- ↑ Sudha Ramachandran (19 June 2003), "India dithers over Iraq dilemma", Asia Times
- ↑ Breffni O'Rourke (6 June 2003), "Iraq: Is Poland Up To The Task Of Directing A Peacekeeping Zone?", Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
- ↑ COBRA II, p. 471
- ↑ "Operation Peninsula Strike,June 9-12, 2003", Globalsecurity
- ↑ Jim Garamone (17 June 2003), "Operation Desert Scorpion Continues Throughout Iraq", American Forces Press Service
- ↑ Sanchez, Wiser in Battle, pp. 206-207
- ↑ Thomas E. Ricks (2006), FIASCO: the American Military Adventure in Iraq, Penguin, ISBN 159320103X, p. 239
- ↑ Gian P. Gentile (Summer 2008), "A (Slightly) Better War: A Narrative and Its Defects", World Affairs
- ↑ Ricks, Fiasco, pp. 232-233
- ↑ Ricks, Fiasco, pp. 226-232
- ↑ Ricks, Fiasco, pp. 179-180
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, pp. 470-474
- ↑ DeLong, pp. 124-125
- ↑ George Packer, The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq, quoted by Art Levine, February 26, 2006, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/art-levine/stuff-happens-revisited_b_16402.html
- ↑ COBRA II, p. 463
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, p. 428
- ↑ James Dobbins, et al. (2003), America's Role in Nation-Building: From Germany to Iraq, RAND Corporation
- ↑ Donald Rumsfeld (February 14, 2003), "Beyond Nation Building", DefenseLink
- ↑ L. Paul Bremer (2006), My Year in Iraq: The Struggle to Build a Future of Hope, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 9780743273893, p. 11
- ↑ L. Paul Bremer (16 May 2003), Coalition Provisional Authority Regulation Number 1
- ↑ Bremer, My Year in Iraq, pp. 295-296
- ↑ Patrick Cockburn (11 April 2008), "Warlord: The rise of Muqtada al-Sadr", Independent (U.K.)
- ↑ Bremer, My Year in Iraq, pp. 302-307
- ↑ Coalition Provisional Authority (8 March 2004), Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period
- ↑ Bremer, My Year in Iraq, pp. 310-311
- ↑ Chris Suellentrop (13 May 2004), "U.N. Envoy Lakhdar Brahimi: Can he save Iraq?", Slate
- ↑ Fouad Ajami (12 May 2004), "The Curse of Pan-Arabia", Wall Street Journal
- ↑ Bremer, pp. 326-327
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, pp. 481-484
- ↑ Rebecca Leung (April 28, 2004), "Abuse Of Iraqi POWs By GIs Probed: 60 Minutes II Has Exclusive Report On Alleged Mistreatment", 60 Minutes, CBS News
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, pp. 484-485
- ↑ Bremer, My Year in Iraq, pp. 351-352
- ↑ Sanchez, Wiser in Battle, pp. 375-380
- ↑ Bremer, My Year in Iraq, pp. 371-377
- ↑ Sharon Otterman (2 June 2004), IRAQ: The interim government leaders, Council on Foreign Relations
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, pp. 494-495
- ↑ David Kilcullen (2004), Countering Global Insurgency, Appendix 1, Small Wars Journal
- ↑ Isikoff & Corn, p. 357
- ↑ , Interview: L. Paul Bremer III"The Lost Year in Iraq", PBS Frontline, June 26 and Aug. 18, 2006.
- ↑ Feith, War and Decision, p. 449
- ↑ Sanchez, p. 227
- ↑ Sanchez, p. 231
- ↑ Ricks, Fiasco, pp. 170-171
- ↑ Thomas Ricks (May 2009), "Understanding the Surge in Iraq and What’s Ahead", E-Notes, Foreign Policy Research Institute
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