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The Coalition of the Billing --
First Past Due Notice
Nikolas Gvosdev
One year ago, commentators were singing the praises of
the "coalition of the willing," believing it to be the
international relations equivalent of sliced bread. No
need to work through formal structures, worry about
alliances and interests, they advised. The United States
could pick and choose among a gaggle of smaller nations
offering capabilities and support. Unilateral action,
multilateral veneer.
Usually, "coalition of the willing" was uttered in the
same breath as "New Europe." Remember New Europe? That
supposedly permanent collection of pro-American regimes
in Europe that would always respond to Washington's
call? New Europe
doesn't look so formidable now, not with the results of
the Spanish elections and the resignation of the Polish
prime minister.
No, we are back to good old national interests as the
basis for future coalitions. Countries in Europe
or elsewhere will ally with the
United States if they
believe it serves their interests to do so.
And so we come to Iraq, where according to all reports
the current coalition is being sorely tested. I borrow
the title of this piece from my colleague Peter Singer
(over at the Brookings Institution), who has used the
phrase in recent days in discussing the growing role of
private military companies in providing personnel for
service in Iraq.
I don't mean to suggest that mercenary motives alone
explain why other states have joined in the coalition.
(Although they cannot be discounted, either. Opposition
is growing in Poland in part because many Poles thought
their companies, especially those with experience in
dealing with Soviet-era technology, might get a larger
piece of the postwar reconstruction pie.) But the
coalition is beginning to fray, because the costs of
continued participation are beginning to rise. And that
has an impact on how long popular support will remain in
favor of continued participation.
The Australian opposition leader Mark Latham has
indicated he will emulate Spain's new prime minister if
elected and withdraw Australian forces. In recent polls,
Labor is outpolling John Howard's conservative coalition
but, significantly, Latham's personal standing dropped
after making that pledge. Right now, most Australians
are prepared to "see things through" in Iraq but that
attitude could change. Already, Thailand‚s prime
minister, Thaksin Shinawatra, has sent signals that he
is reconsidering his country's deployment. Kazakhstan's
Defense Minister Mukhtar Altynbayev has announced his
country will not renew its participation; New Zealand
and Singapore are also out.
It is very true that, so far, we are talking about
dozens or hundreds of soldiers. There are some 24,000
non-U.S., non-British forces currently in service in
Iraq, and most will remain on duty. But many of these
troops are engineers or otherwise engaged in
reconstruction efforts--they are not front-line combat
soldiers. And there is increased grumbling that fighting
insurgents is not what these countries signed up for.
And given growing dissatisfaction with the way the U.S.
is conducting military operations—even reportedly among
members of the British command (British news reports
have called attention to comments that "America’s
aggressive methods were causing friction among allied
commanders" and that there is a growing sense of "unease
and frustration" among UK military leaders), there
hasn't been a real rush of volunteers from other states
to provide extra, additional forces.
Ah, the halcyon days of August 2003, when so many
members of Congress were blithely predicting that the
U.S. could expect other countries to provide additional
"boots on the ground" so that American soldiers could go
home!
And Senator John Kerry, the presumptive Democratic
nominee, continues to insist that "internationalizing"
the occupation in Iraq can produce results. This week,
he wrote:
"We also need to renew our effort to attract
international support in the form of boots on the ground
to create a climate of security in Iraq. We need more
troops and more people who can train Iraqi troops and
assist Iraqi police. "
It's not going to happen. And so it's time to face
realities.
Reality number one: no other country – not even Britain
– is going to provide more combat forces.
Reality number two: insurgencies do not need large
numbers to be effective. All they require is that a
majority of the population to acquiesce, allowing them
to take action. So to defeat an insurgency, you must
crush it, co-opt it or cut it away from the larger
society. All three of these options require more forces
and more funds, and even then, there is no guarantee of
success. They also extract political costs as well.
So what are the remaining options? One is to adopt the
John Paul Vann strategy from Vietnam--dispense with the
"fiction" that the Governing Council represents a
functioning body and simply recreate an Iraqi state from
the ground up.
Another is to let the Governing Council adopt the
policies taken by the government of Sierra Leone in
1995--contract directly with mercenaries to provide
security and training. (With the help of foreign
professionals, the Sierra Leonese government put down
insurgents, trained its military and was able to
stabilize the country in order to hold democratic
elections in 1996. It was only after the contract
expired in 1997 and the mercenaries departed--in keeping
with a UN-brokered plan--that, four months later, the
government was overthrown.)
But let's abandon any remaining fantasies about a
"coalition" that is willing and able to take on
America's burdens in Iraq.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev is
editor of In the National Interest.
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