U.S. Lowers Sights On What
Can Be Achieved in Iraq
Washington Post
By Robin Wright and Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, August 14, 2005; Page A01
The Bush administration is significantly lowering expectations
of what can be achieved in Iraq, recognizing that the United
States will have to settle for far less progress than originally
envisioned during the transition due to end in four months,
according to U.S. officials in Washington and Baghdad.
The United States no longer expects to see a model new
democracy, a self-supporting oil industry or a society in which
the majority of people are free from serious security or economic
challenges, U.S. officials say.
"What we expected to achieve was never realistic given the
timetable or what unfolded on the ground," said a senior official
involved in policy since the 2003 invasion. "We are in a process
of absorbing the factors of the situation we're in and shedding
the unreality that dominated at the beginning."
Administration officials still emphasize how much they have
achieved despite the chaos that followed the invasion and the
escalating insurgency. "Iraqis are taking control of their
country, building a free nation that can govern itself, sustain
itself and defend itself. And we're helping Iraqis succeed,"
President Bush said yesterday in his radio address.
Iraqi officials yesterday struggled to agree on a draft
constitution by a deadline of tomorrow so the document can be
submitted to a vote in October. The political transition would be
completed in December by elections for a permanent
government.
But the realities of daily life are a constant reminder of how
the initial U.S. ambitions have not been fulfilled in ways that
Americans and Iraqis once anticipated. Many of Baghdad's 6
million people go without electricity for days in 120-degree
heat. Parents fearful of kidnapping are keeping children
indoors.
Barbers post signs saying they do not shave men, after months
of barbers being killed by religious extremists. Ethnic or
religious-based militias police the northern and southern
portions of Iraq. Analysts estimate that in the whole of Iraq,
unemployment is 50 percent to 65 percent.
U.S. officials say no turning point forced a reassessment. "It
happened rather gradually," said the senior official, triggered
by everything from the insurgency to shifting budgets to U.S.
personnel changes in Baghdad.
The ferocious debate over a new constitution has particularly
driven home the gap between the original U.S. goals and the
realities after almost 28 months. The U.S. decision to invade
Iraq was justified in part by the goal of establishing a secular
and modern Iraq that honors human rights and unites disparate
ethnic and religious communities.
But whatever the outcome on specific disputes, the document on
which Iraq's future is to be built will require laws to be
compliant with Islam. Kurds and Shiites are expecting de facto
long-term political privileges. And women's rights will not be as
firmly entrenched as Washington has tried to insist, U.S.
officials and Iraq analysts say.
"We set out to establish a democracy, but we're slowly
realizing we will have some form of Islamic republic," said
another U.S. official familiar with policymaking from the
beginning, who like some others interviewed would speak candidly
only on the condition of anonymity. "That process is being
repeated all over."
U.S. officials now acknowledge that they misread the strength
of the sentiment among Kurds and Shiites to create a special
status. The Shiites' request this month for autonomy to be
guaranteed in the constitution stunned the Bush administration,
even after more than two years of intense intervention in Iraq's
political process, they said.
"We didn't calculate the depths of feeling in both the Kurdish
and Shiite communities for a winner-take-all attitude," said
Judith S. Yaphe, a former CIA Iraq analyst at the National
Defense University.
In the race to meet a sequence of fall deadlines, the process
of forging national unity behind the constitution is largely
being scrapped, current and former officials involved in the
transition said.
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"We are definitely cutting corners and lowering our ambitions
in democracy building," said Larry Diamond, a Stanford University
democracy expert who worked with the U.S. occupation government
and wrote the book "Squandered Victory: The American Occupation
and the Bungled Effort to Bring Democracy to Iraq."
"Under pressure to get a constitution done, they've lowered
their own ambitions in terms of getting a document that is going
to be very far-reaching and democratic. We also don't have the
time to go through the process we envisioned when we wrote the
interim constitution -- to build a democratic culture and
consensus through debate over a permanent constitution," he
said.
The goal now is to ensure a constitution that can be easily
amended later so Iraq can grow into a democracy, U.S. officials
say.
On security, the administration originally expected the
U.S.-led coalition to be welcomed with rice and rosewater,
traditional Arab greetings, with only a limited reaction from
loyalists of ousted Iraqi president Saddam Hussein. The
surprising scope of the insurgency and influx of foreign fighters
has forced Washington to repeatedly lower expectations -- about
the time-frame for quelling the insurgency and creating an
effective and cohesive Iraqi force capable of stepping in, U.S.
officials said.
Killings of members of the Iraqi security force have tripled
since January. Iraq's ministry of health estimates that bombings
and other attacks have killed 4,000 civilians in Baghdad since
Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari's interim government took office
April 28.
Last week was the fourth-worst week of the whole war for U.S.
military deaths in combat, and August already is the worst month
for deaths of members of the National Guard and Reserve.
Attacks on U.S. convoys by insurgents using roadside bombs
have doubled over the past year, Army Brig. Gen. Yves Fontaine
said Friday. Convoys ferrying food, fuel, water, arms and
equipment from Kuwait, Jordan and Turkey are attacked about 30
times a week, Fontaine said.
"There has been a realistic reassessment of what it is
possible to achieve in the short term and fashion a partial exit
strategy," Yaphe said. "This change is dictated not just by
events on the ground but by unrealistic expectations at the
start."
Washington now does not expect to fully defeat the insurgency
before departing, but instead to diminish it, officials and
analysts said. There is also growing talk of turning over
security responsibilities to the Iraqi forces even if they are
not fully up to original U.S. expectations, in part because they
have local legitimacy that U.S. troops often do not.
"We've said we won't leave a day before it's necessary. But
necessary is the key word -- necessary for them or for us? When
we finally depart, it will probably be for us," a U.S. official
said.
Pressed by the cost of fighting an escalating insurgency, U.S.
expectations for rebuilding Iraq -- and its $20 billion
investment -- have fallen the farthest, current and former
officials say.
Pentagon officials originally envisioned Iraq's oil revenue
paying many post-invasion expenses. But Iraq, ranked among world
leaders behind Saudi Arabia in proven oil reserves, is incapable
of producing enough refined fuel amid a car-buying boom that has
put an estimated 1 million more vehicles on the road after the
invasion. Lines for subsidized cheap gas stretch for miles every
day in Baghdad.
Oil production is estimated at 2.22 million barrels a day,
short of the goal of 2.5 million. Iraq's pre-war high was 2.67
million barrels a day.
The United States had high hopes of quick, big-budget fixes
for the electrical power system that would show Iraqis tangible
benefits from the ouster of Hussein. But inadequate training for
Iraqi staff, regional rivalries restricting the power flow to
Baghdad, inadequate fuel for electrical generators and attacks on
the infrastructure have contributed to the worst summer of
electrical shortages in the capital.
Water is also a "tough, tough" situation in a desert country,
said a U.S. official in Baghdad familiar with reconstruction
issues. Pumping stations depend on electricity, and engineers now
say the system has hundreds of thousands of leaks.
"The most thoroughly dashed expectation was the ability to
build a robust self-sustaining economy. We're nowhere near that.
State industries, electricity are all below what they were before
we got there," said Wayne White, former head of the State
Department's Iraq intelligence team who is now at the Middle East
Institute. "The administration says Saddam ran down the country.
But most damage was from looting [after the invasion], which took
down state industries, large private manufacturing, the national
electric" system.
Ironically, White said, the initial ambitions may have
complicated the U.S. mission: "In order to get out earlier,
expectations are going to have to be lower, even much lower. The
higher your expectation, the longer you have to stay. Getting out
is going to be a more important consideration than the original
goals were. They were unrealistic."
Knickmeyer reported from Baghdad
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