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The Complex Success of the Surge
American Thinker ^ | July 23, 2008 | Randall Hoven

Posted on 07/23/2008 2:23:28 PM PDT by Kaslin

The "surge" in Iraq sure appears to have worked.  There are some who say President Bush should have listened to voices such as Senator John McCain and then Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki in the first place, rather than taking the foolish advice of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other "neo-con" hardliners.

But before we give all the credit to the "more boots on the ground" stompers and all the blame to Rumsfeld and the neo-cons, let's take a second look at the surge.

To set the stage, let's look at the results to date.  (In the following, my reference is the Brookings Institute's "Iraq Index" dated July 17, 2008.  )


In addition to the above, the White House has reported that the Iraqi government achieved "satisfactory" progress on 15 of 18 political benchmarks as set by Congress and the President.

With results like these, who can deny the "surge" is working?  I will, to a certain extent.

It's not that the surge isn't working -- something sure is working.  It's that giving all the credit to the "surge" is a vast oversimplification.  It gives too much credit to the "more boots on the ground" advocates and too much blame to Rumsfeld and his "neo-con" cohorts.  The surge probably needed certain conditions in place beforehand; it almost surely would not have worked at just any time since March 2003.

How big was the surge?  The surge was announced in January 2007.  In 2006 the number of US troops in Iraq peaked at 144,000 in September and October.  The US troop level peaked about one year later, at 171,000 in October 2007.  That is a 19% increase.

However, some of those US troops were making up for a loss of non-US troops.  Total coalition troops went from 162,000 in September 2006 to 182,668 in October 2007.  An increase of less than 13%.  That was the "surge" in terms of coalition troop levels - 13 %.

To put these numbers in perspective, General Shinseki estimated that 400,000 or even 500,000 troops would be needed.  At the very peak of the surge, the actual number of US troops was barely over a third of that.

Of course the "surge" meant more than simply more boots on the ground.  This April 2008, General Petraeus gave testimony to Congress saying

"A number of factors have contributed to the progress... You are well aware of the US [troop] surge.  Less recognized is that Iraq has also conducted a surge, adding well over 100,000 additional soldiers and police to the ranks... A second factor has been the employment of Coalition and Iraqi Forces ... deployed together... Another important factor has been the attitudinal shift among certain elements of the Iraqi population."

Look at what was needed, according to the General in charge of the surge, in addition to more coalition troops: large numbers of Iraqi forces, Iraqi forces capable of fighting, Iraqi forces willing and able to work together with US troops, and a major shift in attitudes in the Iraqi population.

These conditions simply did not exist at the beginning of the war.  We had to create them.

In May 2003, there were only about 8,000 Iraqi Security Forces.  By the end of 2003 they had grown to 100,000.  By January of 2007, when the surge was announced, there were 323,000 Iraqi forces.  Today there are almost 500,000.  And as those numbers grew, those forces were being trained by people like General Petraeus.  They worked more and more with coalition troops.  They took control over more areas of Iraq.  They gained combat experience.

In short, you can't go from 8,000 rag-tag troops accustomed to the Baathist Army's corrupt chain-of-command to 500,000 soldiers willing and capable of working with the modern, professional US military overnight.  It took years.  In fact, I'd say it took about four years.

And what about the "attitudinal shift among certain elements of the Iraqi population?"  You think holding three successful and honest elections (remember the purple fingers), a functioning parliament and an accepted constitution might have had something to do with it?  Those things didn't happen overnight, or painlessly, either.

You can say the surge worked, but it only worked because of what came before it.  And what came before it took a good four years of pain and cost.  President Bush told us long ago it would be "hard work" that would take "patience."  To all those "told you so" types, please repeat after me:  "President Bush was right."

If we had put something like 400,000 troops in Iraq from the outset, we would have had to reinstitute the draft.  You think opposition to the war was bad as it was, what if 19-year-olds were being forced into that desert death zone against their and their parents' will?  Then you would have had a repeat of Vietnam.

Also, what would those extra 250,000 troops have done?  I'm not a military strategist, and I will not play one here.  But even I know that deploying troops is more than a matter of numbers.  Those troops need missions.  If they had marched into cities and towns in large numbers, shot who they thought should be shot, and governed the populations without benefit of Iraqi government or forces, that Iraqi "attitudinal shift" might have been in an entirely different direction.

As it was, the violence was not widespread throughout Iraq.  Five of the 18 provinces accounted for 87% of insurgent attacks.  Six of those 18, combined, accounted for less than 1% of the attacks.  That means much of Iraq was actually fairly pacified all that time. 

Would going overboard with the occupation have radicalized those relatively pacified 13 provinces?  What if the Shiite Grand Ayatollah Sistani had advocated violence against the US coalition instead of cooperation with it?  What if the Kurds of the north preferred civil war to being policed by non-de-baathified security forces?

You think the Iraq war was bad?  It could have been worse.  In fact, let's look at how much was accomplished before the surge.


All in all, the time period between the March 2003 invasion and the beginning of the "surge" in January of 2007 (in short, Rumsfeld's tenure), was one of great accomplishment.  It set the stage for a successful surge.  I would go so far as to say the pre-2007 accomplishments were necessary conditions for a successful surge.

Nothing is ever perfect, but how much better could anyone have expected it to be?  Moreover, how can anyone with an ounce of humility think he knows how to have done it better?  After all, this is war.

By all means, let's praise General Petraeus to high heaven.  But let's also recognize the much-maligned Donald Rumsfeld et al for what they did with their thankless assignment.

And all this -- pre-surge, surge, and post-surge -- are necessary conditions for pulling our troops out of Iraq while also leaving it reliably safer than before 2003.  In fact, things seem to be going so well that Barack Obama's and Prime Minister Maliki's wish of a pullout in 2010 might very well be possible.

What a shame if Obama would get the credit for a "pullout" that could only have been possible because of the decisions of President Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and David Petraeus and the lives of over 4,000 US troops.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: bush; dod; iraq; mccain; petraeus; rumsfeld; surge

1 posted on 07/23/2008 2:23:29 PM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

bump


2 posted on 07/23/2008 2:27:15 PM PDT by Skooz (Property taxes are immoral)
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To: Kaslin
A lot of good stuff here, but the surge was much more that a 19% increase in "boots on the ground," it came close to doubling the number of actual combat troops in theater.

Only about 20-25% of "boots on the ground" are combat troops, the remainder are support troops. So the addition of 20,000 combat troops came close to doubling our combat capability.

Rumsfeld wasn't as bad as he's been made out to be (in fact, he was my favorite person to watch during testimony before the Dems in Congress), but it was definitely time for a course correction and the surge has made a large difference, IMHO.
3 posted on 07/23/2008 2:47:00 PM PDT by Sudetenland (Those diplomats serve best, who serve as cannon fodder to protect our troops!)
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To: Kaslin
What a shame if Obama would get the credit for a "pullout" that could only have been possible because of the decisions of President Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and David Petraeus and the lives of over 4,000 US troops.

But - you know this is exactly what will happen should the Obamessiah get elected. It's one of the reason's why I will be holding my nose as I pull the lever for McCain.

4 posted on 07/23/2008 3:02:27 PM PDT by capydick ("History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid".)
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To: Sudetenland
While I agree with you that Rumsfeld was not as bad as his worst critics alledge, I think we should have gone in with more troops initially. One major point of the article though is what would the extra troops have done?

Also, what would those extra 250,000 troops have done? I'm not a military strategist, and I will not play one here. But even I know that deploying troops is more than a matter of numbers. Those troops need missions. If they had marched into cities and towns in large numbers, shot who they thought should be shot, and governed the populations without benefit of Iraqi government or forces, that Iraqi "attitudinal shift" might have been in an entirely different direction.

I believe that the Army had to write a Manual on counter insurgency tactics almost from scratch in the period 2004-2006.

5 posted on 07/23/2008 3:44:08 PM PDT by Fraxinus (My opinion, worth what you paid.)
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To: Sudetenland
The key to the surge isn't necessarily the additional boots on the ground. As has been stated elsewhere, if there hadn't been both a strategic & tactical shift in thinking, extra soldiers would have merely continued to execute/compound mistakes of previous operations.

The real defining characteristic of the surge is the partition of ethnic neighborhoods. Rater than allow Iraq to be partitioned in total, intra-state/community partitioning has enabled the creation of secure zones regulated by tightly monitored security checkpoints.

It is these checkpoints & segregated neighborhoods that allow both our + Iraqi troops to provide security & protection, thus engendering confidence and trust. I mean, after years of random terrorist bombings, wouldn't you sure as heck appreciate a little peace & quiet and respect for those who enable/maintain this new found lifestyle?

6 posted on 07/23/2008 3:56:37 PM PDT by semantic
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To: Kaslin

Great article. I have held the opinion that Rumsfeld got a bum rap with regard to Iraq. I like what is happening there, but he was no out of touch flake by any means, and I didn’t like the way the swap out was portrayed.

Rumsfeld is a good man.


7 posted on 07/23/2008 4:01:01 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Oh my coolaide has a fist name, it's B A R A K, my coolaide has a second name it's J U A N Y...)
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To: DoughtyOne; Sudetenland
Here are some realities regarding SecDef Rumsfeld. It was SecDef Rumsfeld who shoved, pushed and dragged the Big Green (Army) into modernization and I'm not talking simply Stryker's and new hats...

It was SecDef Rumsfeld who demanded an alternative Op plan for Stan (after Sept 11th) instead of the ridiculous Op plan demanded by Gen. Shinzeki and the Big Green. As they declared as the only way to be successful...Which called for 5 Divisions and a 6-8 month build up before we would be able to deal with removing the Taliban and al-Qeade from Stan...(and don't forget the 82nd's demand for bowling alley's before they wanted to play)...

It was SecDef Rumsfeld who demanded for all services to integrate and push the priority of CAS (which has saved thousands of U.S. lives to date...and killed thousands more of the enemy)..

It was also SecDef Rumsfeld who has turned our Shooters from SOCOM loose like never before.....and allowed them to rid themselves of risk-adverse OGAs for their own Intel gathering.....It was SecDef Rumsfeld who got SOCOM authorized as its own war-fighting command.....(which of course hurt many feelings in the Big Green...as now they are often tasked as "support" for SOCOM...and not the other way around).

SecDef Rumsfeld supported a light footprint doctrine when it made sense. Both in Stan and for the original phase of OIF it made sense to go with the numbers we went with (and many conveniently leave out the fact that the 4th ID sat off shore because State couldn't pull its d*ck out of its own pants once again and make Turkey cooperate). The reality of what was accomplished throughout this WOT over the last 7 years is historically amazing....and the world (and specifically the United States) is safer today (without question) because of the leadership and changes demanded by SecDef Rumsfeld.

It should also be mentioned regarding Iraq that it was again State (and Bremer) who pushed for quick / full elections so early. Not SecDef Rumsfeld. This has since turned out to not have been so wise.

Additionally, nobody could fully understand the level of obscene violence that the insurgents / terrorists were capable of....Nor to what effect 30 years of Saddam rule had done to the vast majority of Iraqis (with regard to standing up for themselves).....

Regarding the "surge" (which was without question the right course of action at the time it was implemented) but all the ground work for the "surge" to be successful was accomplished prior to that throughout all of 06 (when the war was waging full speed it seemed)....It was in 06 that AQ was all but taken out and destroyed....The "Surge" allowed us (and the new Iraqi Gov't) to step in and fill that void that was created by taking out AQ leadership within Iraq.

8 posted on 07/23/2008 4:28:26 PM PDT by DevSix
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To: Kaslin; Brian Rooney; Jarhead2844; USMCWriter; 1stbn27; 2111USMC; 2nd Bn, 11th Mar; 68 grunt; ...

This is pretty good, however there is no mention of the pivotal events called Haditha and Hamdania...events I will believe -until my dying day- that were critically instrumental in turning the tide.


9 posted on 07/23/2008 4:30:35 PM PDT by freema (MarineNiece,Daughter,Wife,Friend,Sister,Friend,Aunt,Friend,Mother,Friend,Cousin, FRiend)
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To: freema
The first and second battles of Fallujah were not only the pivotal battles in Iraq, but also in the entire War on Terror. That is where we exterminated the old school, al Qaeda, Afghan muj.

We broke their backs when we took on their best and most experienced. They will never recover.

10 posted on 07/23/2008 7:59:34 PM PDT by gandalftb ("War educates the senses" (Emerson))
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To: DevSix
State is regularly trying to put its d*ck in the Bush administrations posterior orifice. Of course that is because each department in state is more interested in getting along with their targeted nation than they are in achieving the administration's goals.

State is one department that needs a head to toe reorganization including the firing of most of the diplomatic corps. If you read John Bolton's book, you, as a conservative, will come away with a real dislike for diplomats and state, hence my tagline. :)
11 posted on 07/23/2008 8:47:27 PM PDT by Sudetenland (Those diplomats serve best, who serve as cannon fodder to protect our troops!)
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