Last month, Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno went to the Hill for his confirmation hearing as the U.S.'s new Iraq commander and... no one cared. Odierno, formerly David Petraeus' second in command, is taking over post-surge Iraq, which you might think merits a discrete strategy. Instead, all the Senators focused on Petraeus himself, who happened to also be testifying alongside Odierno. As a result, Odierno sounded like Petraeus-lite, suggesting that he'd hew to Petraeus's "population protection" strategy, even though Petraeus had five more Army brigades than Odierno will. No one cared.
In the Washington Post today, it appears that if Odierno actually has a post-surge strategy, he's the only one. The GAO says that the Bush administration has come full circle in terms of cluelessness:
The administration lacks an updated and comprehensive Iraq strategy to move beyond the "surge" of combat troops President Bush launched in January 2007 as an 18-month effort to curtail violence and build Iraqi democracy, government investigators said yesterday.
While agreeing with the administration that violence has decreased sharply, a report released yesterday by the Government Accountability Office concluded that many other goals Bush outlined a year and a half ago in the "New Way Forward" strategy remain unmet.
Aside from that, though, the surge totally worked! The Kagans told me so!
That's not all. Doing her job as a reporter, the Post's Karen DeYoung noted the differences between the GAO's assessment and the Pentagon's:
The GAO report contrasted with a Pentagon report, dated June 13 but not released until yesterday. The Defense Department's quarterly assessment to Congress, "Measuring Security and Stability in Iraq," said that "security, political and economic trends in Iraq continue to be positive, although they remain fragile, reversible and uneven."
In many respects, the two reports seemed to assess wholly different realities. The 74-page Pentagon document emphasized what it called the "negative role" in Iraqi security that Iran and Syria have played. The 94-page GAO report did not mention Iran and referred to Syria only in the context of Iraqi refugees who had settled there.
There's also a piece of classic newspeak. The Defense Department "nonconcurs" -- their word! -- with a classified GAO assessment that reportedly says the Petraeus/Crocker "Joint Campaign Plan" is less a strategy than "an operational plan with limitations." You'd think that'd be an anodyne criticism, since it was clear from the start that the surge was an attempt at making the 2005-vintage Clear-Hold-Build plan work . But conceding that point that won't help elect John McCain.
Login Here
Share This
Spotlight
Trackback


Support this site!
Keep
up with news
Advertise on Firedoglake
Send
us your tips
Make us your homepage
About ATTACKERMAN
Advanced search
RSS/XML Feed
Good morning Spencer…welcome!
The Kagans are evil people.
Is Odierno a Petreus protoge, if that’s the right word? Or just the next in line?
Nonconcur?
that willl be a clasic
Thanks very much Spencer.
This piece fills a very noticeable gap here with liberal talking points about the Middle East occupations in general. (Swopa imho is a notable exception.) Too often we fail to address military issues using the language of military preparedness. FDL can’t (nor should it) do everything and I give Jane very high marks for brand discipline. These are, however, the kinds of questions Steve Gilliard (RIP) was asking:
Democrats simply ignored the fact that Bush ignored the Powell Doctrine of overwhelming force:
The questions posed by the Powell Doctrine, which should be answered affirmatively before military action, are:
1. Is a vital national security interest threatened?
2. Do we have a clear attainable objective?
3. Have the risks and costs been fully and frankly analyzed?
4. Have all other non-violent policy means been fully exhausted?
5. Is there a plausible exit strategy to avoid endless entanglement?
6. Have the consequences of our action been fully considered?
7. Is the action supported by the American people?
8. Do we have genuine broad international support?
If you’re interested Sara over at tnh has done some terrific work on US military thinking about occupations. It’s a shame the Pentagon let Bush contradict what they teach at West Point.
Thanks again for the post.
Good morning Martha! And thanks! On Odierno, he’s not so much a protege, and Petraeus inherited him as corps commander. Their relationship is kind of complicated, but I tried to get into it in this piece.
Morning Spencer — great to have you here! Luv the tattoo…
Welcome, Welcome to the Lake, Spencer !
can’t wait to read these posts. damn Jane
I remind everyone that Raymond Odierno was the CO when US Military used Willy Pete on civilians sleeping in their beds
crikey !
at Fallujah