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Coalition Warfare in Iraq: Then and
Now
Rick Russell
A common critique of the Bush administration's war in
Iraq is that George W. Bush failed to diplomatically
harness as broad a coalition as his father George H. W.
Bush had in the 1990-91 Gulf War. This common wisdom
holds that had the current President been as much of a
statesman as his father, the situation in
Iraq
would be far more stable and certain than it is today.
Rarely, if ever, do the media, commentators or people on
the street challenge this common wisdom.
Pausing for just a moment to peak behind the common
mind's argument, however, reveals that the coalition
configuration that fought against Saddam's regime last
year and is now waging a counterinsurgency – against
what's left of Saddam's thugs among the Sunnis, the
Shiite militant movement catalyzed by Muqtada al-Sadr,
al-Qaeda and other fundamentalist Islamic zealots – is
much the same as the coalition that waged war against
Iraq in 1991.
The 1990-91 war showcased a wide array of more than
thirty countries that contributed forces to oust the
Iraqi military from Kuwait, but the burdens of waging
war – as distinct from photo opportunities – were
carried by a lonely couple, the Americans and the
British. American and British forces spearheaded the
coalition drives into and around Iraqi forces occupying
Kuwait. The French, after much political controversy
and turmoil in Paris, eventually managed to dispatch a
substantial force to the coalition. To placate the
French ego, their forces were assigned to holding down
an Iraqi airfield far from harm's way and the major
thrusts of American and British operations. The
Germans, under a more restrictive interpretation than
today of their constitution sent only a handful of
trainer aircraft to
Turkey.
Arab forces from Egypt, Syria and the Gulf Cooperation
Council added much political clout to the coalition, but
little in the way of proficient men or arms for waging
war. Their major, if not only, contribution in battle
was to carry the Kuwaiti flag into Kuwait
City
after it had been liberated by American and British
forces. The more significant contributions from the
Arab
Gulf
states came in the form of financial backing, the
provision of facilities and transit rights for the
British and Americans forces waging the campaign. Often
overlooked today is that Arab opposition to marching
coalition forces into Iraqi territory stymied any
ambitious strategic thinking in Washington and London to
set the removal of Saddam's regime as the political
objective for Desert Storm.
Fast forward to examine the current conflict in Iraq and
a sense of déjà vu arises when examining the
military contributions to ousting Saddam's repugnant
regime and the counterinsurgency operations now
underway. While the Bush Administration touts some
eighty coalition members contributing to the war on
terror – a figure that is near meaningless because it
lumps token military contributions to operations against
al-Qaeda, in
Afghanistan
and Iraq together – the number simply does not convey
the critical characteristics of the war in Iraq. Just
as in the 1991 campaign, American and British forces
spearheaded military operations in the 2003 war to oust
Saddam. The Americans made bold military dashes to take
Baghdad while the British ably secured Basra. The
absence of French and German military contributions
mattered little; just as their battlefield contributions
to the first Iraq war were negligible. Nor were Arab
forces dispatched to help the American and British
spearheads given political sensitivities and
vulnerabilities reminiscent of those that caused Arab
regimes to fear any prospects for coalition operations
inside Iraq during the first Iraq war.
But American and British forces did not use outer space
as the staging point for the campaign against Saddam;
they used received logistics, command and control
facilities, airspace transit rights, port access and
airbases to varying degrees from the Arab Gulf States
much as Washington and London had in the earlier war.
While many Gulf States publicly denounced American and
British war efforts in craven pandering to Arab public
opinion, they privately lent the support needed to wage
the war. This reality belies the common wisdom's false
dichotomy that this war is "unilateral," contrasting
with the first Gulf war which was
"multilateral."
Despite all the confidence in the common mind about the
strengths of coalition warfare of the first Iraq war and
the weaknesses of coalition warfare in the second Iraq
war, there are more similarities than differences. And
calls for more "multinational" participation in Iraq
ring hallow against the political and military realities
of the region and international security.
Europe's
NATO members – save the British – and Arab forces made
few battlefield contributions in the first
Iraq
war and are no more willing or able to contribute
militarily to the second
Iraq war. Just as it
was more than a decade ago, the Americans and the
British find themselves a lonely couple waging
"coalition" warfare in Iraq.
Richard L. Russell is
a Research Associate at the Institute for the Study of
Diplomacy and teaches in the Security Studies Program at
Georgetown University. |