War College Report: Iraq War
an 'Error'
Yahoo News/AP
BOB JOHNSON
Tue Jan 13,12:21 AM ET
MONTGOMERY, Ala. - A report published by the Army War College
calls the Bush administration's war on terrorism unfocused and
says the invasion of Iraq was "a strategic error."
The research paper by Jeffrey Record, a professor at the Air
War College at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, said the
president's strategy "promises much more than it can deliver" and
threatens to spread U.S. military resources too thin. Record also
wrote that Saddam Hussein's Iraq did not present a threat to the
United States and was a distraction from the war on
terrorism.
Record is a visiting professor at the Army War College at
Carlisle Barracks, Pa. The paper was published last month by the
Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute.
Lt. Col. Merideth Bucher, public affairs officer for the Army
War College, said Monday it is not unusual for students, mostly
higher ranking officers, at the war college to be exposed to
critical thought that might be contrary to current national
policy. She said students are often exposed to speakers with
varying views.
The director of the Strategic Studies Institute, Douglas
Lovelace Jr., said it was originally founded by President Dwight
Eisenhower to take a critical independent analysis of military
issues from an academic perspective.
"Dr. Record is a noted national security specialist. It's not
at all at odds for us to analyze a given mission and arrive at a
conclusion that seems at odds with national policy," Lovelace
said. He said in the past the institute has released studies
analyzing U.S. policy in Haiti, Afghanistan and other hot
spots.
Record could not be reached immediately for comment Monday
through Army public affairs offices and he did not immediately
respond to e-mails from The Associated Press. He is the author of
six books and is a former legislative assistant for national
security affairs to Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Georgia, and former Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas.
Record's report concludes that the war on terrorism is too
widespread and should focus on al-Qaeda and other terrorist
threats to the United States.
"The United States may be able to defeat al-Qaeda, but it
cannot rid the world of terrorism, much less evil," Record
writes.
Copyright © 2004 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the
prior written authority of The Associated Press.
Copyright © 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
|