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Goals
and Means: Envisioning U. S. Policy toward Iraq
Samuel
Lewis
What does the United States hope
to achieve vis-à-vis Iraq?
Allow me to lay out the options
for the United States in a systematic fashion. Since I
am not a military expert, let me forego commenting on
the military options, and concentrate on the first two
sets of options before the Bush Administration: its
goals and the military and diplomatic alternatives for
achieving those goals.
As for goals: in my opinion, the
only choice before the United States is whether to try
to fundamentally reshape Iraq or to pursue a minimum
regime change coupled with WMD eradication. The first
choice would require a massive effort to rebuild Iraq as
a state that incorporates elements of pluralism,
accommodates domestic political interests and ethnic
reconciliation, and reconstructing the infrastructure of
society. In the process, we would seek to eliminate
every iota of WMD capabilities found in the country. The
second option would require more than simply
decapitating Saddam Hussein alone; to be acceptable, it
would have to eliminate approximately fifty to
seventy-five of the top people in the existing regime,
and constructing a new government (with some
participation from opposition figures as well).
Both options would require a
substantial military occupation of Iraq, for the short
term, to damp down threats of civil war or revenge
killings. The second option, however, does not envision
a need to support a long-term international trusteeship
of Iraq (lasting at minimum between five to ten years).
Instead, a shorter period (of between two to four
years), designed to leave in place a government that has
credibility and is friendly to the United States.
What are the military-diplomatic
options? I see four, which I will list in order of
"soft" to "hard." The first is what
I term "extended multilateralism." Here, after
watching many months of enhanced tougher inspections,
the United States engages in a renewed effort to impose
a much harsher form of containment on Iraq. The U. S.
would bring to the Security Council enough evidence for
the Council to impose a newer, much tougher sanctions
regime against Iraq, but stops short of a full-scale
invasion.
The second is "conditional
multilateralism", where the United States keeps up
the pressure to force inspections in order to produce a
report by the end of January 2003 that allows us to
extract the necessary evidence to demonstrate Iraq's
material breaches of its obligations under UN
resolutions. Armed with this evidence, the United States
would go before the Security Council to gain their
formal or tacit endorsement to allow Washington to
assemble a "coalition of the willing" to carry
through what we believe is already implicit in early
resolutions. In essence, we would seek of the other
permanent members assurances that they would not stand
in our way. To achieve this, however, the Bush
Administration must be willing to share sensitive
intelligence with the leaders of the other permanent
member states, if necessary, that makes this case
perfectly clear.
The third is what I would term
"minimum multilateralism." Here, the United
States would seek no new resolution or approval from the
UN Security Council but would directly approach the key
countries we believe are necessary in order to ensure
success in Iraq. We would need to convince them that a)
we are committed and b) that there is sufficient
evidence of Iraqi noncompliance. Here again, we would
need to be prepared to make both a public case for
support and a private case to specific leaders, again by
sharing sensitive intelligence, if necessary.
The final scenario is a variant
on the third, "unilateralism plus", where the
United States concludes, after its own review of the
documents provided by Iraq, that Saddam Hussein's regime
is in material breach of the resolutions, and we
announce our readiness to disarm Iraq by force. In this
case, we would expect the other key countries to join
us, but, unlike the third option, our launching military
operations would not be contingent upon first gaining
the approval of the other allies and partners we feel
are needed for the success of this operation.
The Honorable Samuel W.
Lewis has a long and distinguished career in American
diplomacy, including heading the State Department's
Policy Planning Staff during the first Clinton
Administration. Ambassador Lewis currently serves as
Senior Policy Advisor for the Israel Policy Forum and as
a Board Member of the American Academy of Diplomacy and
the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown
University.
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