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Jewish World Review April 8, 2008 / 3 Nissan 5768
Required reading
By Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.
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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
The war over Iraq not to be confused with the conflict
actually taking place there is back in the headlines. This week's
report to Congress by America's top two emissaries in Baghdad, Gen.
David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker, will provide a backdrop for
the momentous decisions to come concerning whether and how to pursue
victory in Iraq.
Before the politicians and their constituents make such
decisions about where we go from here, they should be sure to ground
themselves in the facts about how we got to this point. After all, as
George Santayana put it, "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed
to repeat it."
Fortunately, it has just become considerably easier to understand the
history of the decision to make Iraq a central front in the larger War
for the Free World and to dissect what was and was not done right and
how to achieve better results in the future. Today marks the
publication of an extraordinary new book on the subject, War and
Decision: Inside the Pentagon at the Dawn of the War on Terror, by
former Under Secretary of Defense Douglas Feith.
Now, Doug Feith has been a valued friend and colleague of mine for
twenty-five years. Consequently, I know him to be a man who is
scrupulous in his command of the facts, exacting in his analysis and
lucidly articulate in his writing.
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Still, I was unprepared for the thoroughness of the documentation, the
sweeping nature of the narrative and the highly readable prose with
which War and Decision depicts the actions precipitated at the highest
levels of the U.S. government by the 9/11 attacks. Particularly
edifying are Mr. Feith's exploration of the serious policy differences
between various decision-makers and the material contribution those
disagreements made to the way in which the preparation, execution and
aftermath of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein's regime went down.
In contrast to previous books and memoirs on the subject that have been
published to date, Feith's is not aimed at self-promotion or
self-vindication. Neither is it an effort to settle scores with those
who have, in some cases viciously, attacked the author in their own
screeds.
Rather, it is the first attempt by a serious student of history to lay
out the myriad, challenging choices confronting a president who, within
eight months of taking office, witnessed a devastating attack on this
country and resolved to prevent another possibly far more destructive
one from occurring. The considerations, the competing recommendations
and the presidential and Cabinet-level decisions that shaped the Bush
Administration's approach to the terrorist threat emanating from
state-sponsored networks are documented in an unvarnished, highly
accessible way.
Particularly interesting are the many points on which earlier tomes and
conventional wisdom are mistaken. For instance, Mr. Feith demonstrates
that the record simply does not support claims that: "Bush and his
hawkish advisors" were intent on waging war on Iraq from the get-go;
Rumsfeld and his "neo-cons" failed to prepare for post-war Iraq and that
the State Department had, only to have its plans spurned by the
Pentagon; and Feith's office tried to manipulate pre-war intelligence
about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction. Given how central many of
these myths are to the current criticism of the Iraq war, the
contradictory evidence deserves attention.
Even more critical to this week's congressional testimony and what
follows on Capitol Hill, on the hustings and, not least in Iraq are
Mr. Feith's insights into problems that continue to afflict America's
execution of the war. For example:
"No dereliction of statesmanship is as unpardonable as a failure to
protect the nation's security. If the head of government underreacts
when the country is threatened, history is not likely to excuse him on
the grounds that his excessive caution enjoyed bipartisan support."
Doug Feith has made important contributions to our nation's security for
three decades in public life and the private sector. If his splendid
War and Decision gets the reading it warrants, others will be more
likely to do so as well.