Bush Aides Seek Alternatives to Iraq Study
Group’s
Proposals, Calling Them
"Impractical" / December 10,
2006 /
By JIM RUTENBERG and DAVID
E.
SANGER / WASHINGTON, Dec. 9, 2006
Administration officials say their preliminary review
of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group’s recommendations has concluded that
many of its key proposals are impractical or unrealistic, and a small group inside
the National Security Council is now racing to come up with alternatives to the
panel’s ideas. In interviews over the last two days with officials from
the White House, the State Department, the Pentagon and foreign diplomats, President
Bush and his
top aides were described as deeply reluctant to follow the core strategy advocated
by the study group: to pressure Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki to rein in
sectarian violence faced with reduced United States military and economic support.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has cautiously embraced that approach, several
officials said, but others — including people in the National Security
Council and the vice president’s office — argue that the risks are
too high. “The worry is that the more Maliki is seen as our puppet, because
he is abiding by our timelines and deadlines, the internal political dynamics
will become so fragile that the whole government would collapse,” said
one senior official participating in the internal review. “That would set
us back a year.” A senior official said the administration was not near
a “decision point” on how to go about influencing Mr. Maliki to move
faster, and he said it was taking seriously some of the report’s suggestions.
But in interviews, senior administration officials, who would not be quoted by
name because Mr. Bush has made no final decisions about how to deal with the
Iraq panel’s recommendations, questioned the study group’s assertions
that Iran had an interest in helping to stabilize the situation in Iraq, or that
it made sense to start negotiations with Iran without conditions. And they took
issue with the decision by former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and the
nine other members of the commission to make no mention of promoting democracy
as an American goal in the Middle East, and to drop any suggestion that “victory” was
still possible in Iraq when they presented their findings to Mr. Bush and to
the public on Wednesday.
“
You saw that the president used the word ‘victory’ again the next
day,” said one of Mr. Bush’s aides. “Believe me, that was no
accident.”
The administration’s inclination to dismiss so many of the major findings
of the bipartisan group sets the stage for what could become a titanic struggle
over Iraq policy. Just two months ago, administration officials were saying that
they believed the findings by the panel headed by Mr. Baker and Lee H. Hamilton,
a former congressman, would be all but written in stone — and that Mr.
Bush would have little choice but to carry out most of them. But in recent weeks,
the White House sought to describe the panel’s role as that of one advisory
group among many.
Andrew H. Card Jr., the president’s chief of staff until last spring, said
that whatever Mr. Bush did in Iraq would probably fall short of many of the commission’s
recommendations, and that he was likely to continue making decisions that he
believed were right even if unpopular. Referring to Mr. Bush’s secret intelligence
briefings, Mr. Card said, “The president by definition knows more than
any of those people who are serving on these panels.”
“
The president’s obligations sometimes require him to be very lonely,” he
said.
Mr. Bush has empowered the “Crouch Group,” a small group of advisers
being coordinated by Jack D. Crouch II, the deputy national security adviser,
to assemble alternative proposals from the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the State Department,
the Treasury Department and staff of the National Security Council.
The administration’s strategy appears to be: Adopt parts of the recommendations
that are under way already, or that are considered minor modifications of those
efforts, and pick away at those that the administration believes imply retreat
or folly. For example, the administration is embracing a recommendation that
it put energy into reviving Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Ms. Rice is planning
a trip to the region early next year, and the administration says it plans to
build on a new initiative by Israel’s prime minister, Ehud Olmert. Similarly,
officials have described the report’s call for the creation of an “Iraq
International Support Group” as a natural expansion of two regional forums
that Ms. Rice has already met with several times, an economic cooperation group
called the “Compact for Iraq” and the “Gulf Plus Two” group,
which includes the Gulf Cooperation Council, plus Egypt and Jordan.
But other recommendations are being cast as overly optimistic. For example, while
White House and Pentagon officials note that they are already embedding additional
trainers and advisers in Iraqi units, they expressed deep skepticism that the
force of 4,000 advisers could be rapidly increased to the 10,000 to 20,000 envisioned
in the report. As a result, they said, they doubted it would be possible to pull
back all 15 American combat brigades from Iraq’s streets and towns by the
first quarter of 2008, the goal in the panel’s report.
The primary author of the military section of the report, William J. Perry, who
was defense secretary under President Clinton, said in an interview on Friday
that the administration’s resistance was baffling to him. “There
are many ways in which the training goals can be achieved in a timely way,” he
said. “If there is a will to carry out the proposed embedding program,
it can be done.”
That argument appears to foreshadow the debate that will develop as Mr. Bush
seeks advice at the State Department, the Pentagon and elsewhere next week. Members
of the study group say they expect to be defending both their individual proposals
and the need for an integrated diplomatic and military package. “Given
the track record these guys in the White House have, you would think they would
show a little humility about taking aboard some outside ideas,” said one
Republican member of the commission who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Dan Senor, a former administration spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority
in Iraq, said that in conversations with administration officials, they had dismissed
many of the report’s recommendations as “not terribly realistic from
an operational standpoint.”
He said former colleagues had told him they felt comforted by the recognition
that there were no good options, because despite all of the intellect brought
to the endeavor, the members of the panel had failed to make the leap from strategy
to implementation. “It’s easy to suggest these steps in theory, but
we haven’t been able to figure out the how,” Mr. Senor said. “Now,
neither have these 10 wise men and woman.”
One of the continuing debates within the White House and the Pentagon is whether
to temporarily “surge” the number of American forces in Baghdad,
in an effort to regain control over Baghdad. But the Pentagon has said that most
of the additional 30,000 forces should be Iraqis.
One foreign diplomat, who requested anonymity because he was discussing American
deliberations, said one strategy being considered would include dividing the
labor between American and Iraqi forces — with Americans focusing on hunting
down elements of Al Qaeda, and the Iraqi forces focusing more on sectarian clashes.
The Iraq Study Group report leaves open the possibility of a temporary increase
in forces, and envisions a similar role for the United States in seeking out
Al Qaeda.
An administration official said that such a division of labor could not be so
black and white. And Vice President Dick Cheney is said to be urging caution
in dealing with the Shiite and Sunni factions, concerned that the administration
avoid signaling that the Shiites would be abandoned as they were at the end of
the Persian Gulf war.
The report’s authors say their strategy will work only if taken largely
as a whole; Mr. Baker warned against treating it like a “fruit salad,” picking
the juiciest pieces. The White House, however, appears to be groping for the
right fork to do exactly that.
Tony Snow, the White House spokesman, said that in spite of Mr. Baker’s
public suggestion that the administration should follow its recommendations fully, “Members
of the Baker-Hamilton commission made it clear that they don’t expect everybody
to agree with each and every jot and tittle.”
“
And the president as commander in chief,” Mr. Snow said, “still has
the obligation to take seriously every bit of analysis and advice he gets, and
to make his own decisions.”
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company