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Ehud Ya'ari: Shortcut to Saddam
The attack on Saddam Hussein, even if it comes late, will surely come. My conviction is based on two main hunches. First, President Bush has no way of retreating from his commitment to a confrontation. And second, toppling Saddam is an attainable goal.
This is why I have allowed myself recently to slip into browse-only mode when it comes to the piles of press articles explaining why the United States would be better off dropping the whole idea, offering wildly exaggerated assessments of the number of troops that will be required for such an action, or analyzing the complications of the morning after.
Another working assumption: The next war in Iraq will be very different from the previous one, more than 10 years ago. We won�t see a touched-up replay of the slow, massive troop build-up in the arena, then the long, softening up period of bombing raids followed by an assault by large armored formations. This time, I would guess, the plan is built on a dramatic opening move, and not on a coup de gr�ce at the end of the show.
A third working assumption which is critical for monitoring this front: Don�t expect any public prior understandings between the United States and the other actors. In my assessment, no agreement will be reached in advance with the multiple, rival factions that make up the Iraqi opposition-in-exile over the division of the war spoils. There is no chance, pre-attack, of being able to put together a binding document on the future leadership of a kind of semi-federal administration, for example, or of reaching a prior settlement on the status of the oil rich Kirkuk and Mosul districts in the north which sit outside the Kurdish enclave protected by the no-fly zone, and which are the subject of rival claims by the Kurds, the Turkmens (with the support of Ankara) and, of course, the Arab majority.
The same is true about the hopes of establishing a pre-invasion government-in-exile on the basis of a wide coalition. It seems to me that even the most talented mediators that Washington could dispatch on this mission would not be able to lay to rest the competition and mutual suspicion between the Iraqi National Congress, the National Accord, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq and the host of retired generals now presenting themselves as potential leaders at conferences that resemble race-horse auctions.
Nor will there be prior agreement with the neighboring states. Turkey and Iran, Saudi Arabia and Syria won�t join together with Americans in a common plan for maintaining the territorial integrity of Iraq under a new regime. They will all be trying to bite off chunks of influence within Iraq, or at least to grab the crumbs that fall off the table.
So the United States will probably have to act on the supposition that the necessary understandings with all the actors, inside and outside Iraq, will only be reached in the course of the fighting. There will be no pre-planned "coalition," nor even a pre-arranged alternative administration to succeed Saddam. The whole process will have to be treated as a "rolling operation."
This time around, the Americans have a chance of starting off inside Iraq: by landing limited numbers of troops in the Kurdish north, in the western desert or even on the edges of the Shi�ite south. Air cover will be provided from bases in Qatar, Turkey, Kuwait and from aircraft carriers in order to curb an offensive by the Republican Guard divisions. Airborne engineering units will work on the three or four airfields in the Kurdish region, and the two in western Iraq, to allow the U.S. Air Force to operate out of Iraqi territory. From the moment that the American military has a foothold inside Iraq, it will be possible to talk at a different level both with the opposition movements and elements within Saddam�s army, and with the neighboring capitals.
Such a scenario -- on condition that it is backed up with good intelligence -- is the best prescription for a short, focused war, whose outcome will be decided at the outset.
The next war in Iraq will be very different from the one more than 10 years ago. This time, I would guess, the plan is built on a dramatic opening move, and not on a coup de gr�ce at the end of the show.
Columnists
- David Horovitz: Intolerable Complacency
- Ehud Ya'ari: �Shabbat Shalom, Dirty Jews�
- Judy Maltz: Formula for Tragedy
- David Horovitz: Not Just Anti-Semitism
- Hirsh Goodman: A Look in the Mirror
- Ehud Ya'ari: Pipe Dreams
- Stuart Schoffman: Uncomfortable Positions
- David Horovitz: The Travails of a Rejected Politician
- Hirsh Goodman: Amir's Curse
- Gershom Gorenberg: Prefer Peace to the Temple Mount
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Hamas-Jihad Axis
- David Horovitz: Sharon Loses Israel
- Hirsh Goodman: Cries in the Dark
- David Horovitz: He�s Winning
- Hirsh Goodman: Message from Above
- Ehud Ya'ari: Meet Abu Ala
- David Horovitz: Don�t Avenge Us, Protect Us
- Hirsh Goodman: A Harmful Illusion
- Ehud Ya'ari: It�s Either with Him -- or without Him
- Stuart Schoffman: Close to Home
- David Horovitz: Give Them All an F
- Hirsh Goodman: Gosh! We Have a Problem
- Ehud Ya'ari: Counterattack
- David Horovitz: In a Land Too Near Chelm
- Stuart Schoffman: Rejoicing with Rafaela
- David Horovitz: Happy �Hudna�?
- Hirsh Goodman: The Silence of the Lambs
- David Horovitz: Ilan Ramon�s Vital Perspective
- Hirsh Goodman: Time to Take a Bow
- Ehud Ya'ari: Syria�s Silent Earthquake
- Gershom Gorenberg: Anti-Family Values
- David Horovitz: Don�t Open the Champagne Yet
- Ehud Ya'ari: It�s Over
- Hirsh Goodman: Boom Baby Boom
- David Horovitz: The Glass Half Full
- Hirsh Goodman: Civil War, Uncivil Behavior
- Stuart Schoffman: The Circumcision Monologues
- David Horovitz: As the Pastoral Memories of Aqaba Fade
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon the Unspontaneous
- Ehud Ya'ari: Riding Low
- David Horovitz: Lobbying, and Its Limits
- Hirsh Goodman: My Yiddishe Brother
- Ehud Ya'ari: Yes Now, Buts Later
- David Horovitz: Goodbye, Mitzna. Goodbye, Labor?
- Hirsh Goodman: Boss Sharon
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Baghdad Effect
- David Horovitz: By Their Tourist Sites You Shall Know Them
- Hirsh Goodman: A �Nebechdik� Race
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Small White Hope
- David Horovitz: Thinking the Unthinkable
- Ehud Ya'ari: A Pesah Miracle
- Gershom Gorenberg: Where the Free Market Flunks
- David Horovitz: Hoping for a More Peaceful Pesah
- Hirsh Goodman: 'In-bedding'
- Ehud Ya'ari: Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
- Stuart Schoffman: The Memory of Egypt
- David Horovitz: Meanwhile, in Iran...
- Hirsh Goodman: On the Firing Line
- David Horovitz: Ejected
- Hirsh Goodman: On Hope
- Ehud Ya'ari: Mahdi Now
- David Horovitz: The Highest Stakes
- Hirsh Goodman: Danger: Big Spender
- Ehud Ya'ari: Yes, Prime Minister!
- David Horovitz: Who Won the Elections?
- Hirsh Goodman: On Symbolism
- Ehud Ya'ari: A Sinai Rendezvous
- Stuart Schoffman: Among School Children
- Ehud Ya'ari: Beware of a �Farhoud�
- David Horovitz: Deaf to the People
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon�s Shambles
- Ehud Ya'ari: Syria On the Boil
- David Horovitz: Setting New Standards
- Hirsh Goodman: No to Unilateralism
- Ehud Ya'ari: Iraq Now
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon�s Nemesis
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Real Issue
- Judy Maltz: Thanks, But No Thanks
- David Horovitz: Choices
- Hirsh Goodman: Mitzna, The Morning After
- Ehud Ya'ari: Not Just Anti-Semitic Lies!
- David Horovitz: A Despicable Failure of International Will
- Hirsh Goodman: Italy without the Pasta
- Ehud Ya'ari: Breaking Loose
- Stuart Schoffman: The Spider�s Strategy
- Hirsh Goodman: �Shush, There�s a War Going On�
- Ehud Ya'ari: Iraq First
- Stuart Schoffman: Gandhi�s Legacy
- David Horovitz: The Oslo Discords
- Hirsh Goodman: Wallowing in It
- Gershom Gorenberg: Sharon�s Lessons for Bush
- David Horovitz: Trouble at the Source
- Hirsh Goodman: Wake-Up Call
- Ehud Ya'ari: Great White Hope?
- David Horovitz: Savaged in the Lion�s Den
- Hirsh Goodman: Confusing Times
- David Horovitz: Full Disclosure
- Hirsh Goodman: Silence That Kills
- Ehud Ya'ari: Another Local Legend
- David Horovitz: When Nowhere Is Safe
- Gershom Gorenberg: Chelmonics
- Ehud Ya'ari: Step It up
- David Horovitz: A Vacuum in the Center
- Hirsh Goodman: Zap -- You�re Jewish
- Ehud Ya'ari: Babysitting the PA
- David Horovitz: Facts on the Ground
- Hirsh Goodman: Watch the �A� Word
- Gershom Gorenberg: Barak, Stay Home
- Ehud Ya'ari: Shortcut to Saddam
- David Horovitz: Vindication
- Hirsh Goodman: Food for Thought
- Ehud Ya'ari: Back for a While
- David Horovitz: Lerner�s Virus
- Hirsh Goodman: The Giver and the Taker
- Ehud Ya'ari: Reformation
- Masterful Sharon?
- No More Herring
- Slightly Different Terror
- Of Laws and Sausages
- What Reforms?
- Visions of Venice
- Europe Buys the Big Lie
- The Republicans Love Israel? Look Carefully.
- Three Cheers for the Spooks
- Not by Force Alone
- A Statistic Waiting for Leadership
- The Return of the PLO
- The Real War of Independence
- Ramallah Plus
- Looking to Washington
- Blood, Sweat and Cappuccino
- The Sands Are Shifting
- Who�s Preventing Normalization?
- War
- The Lieutenant�s Story
- Which Solution Do We Want?
- A Rudderless Ship
- While Syria Sleeps
- Get the Message Across
- An Unwanted Casualty
- A Lion in Winter
- The Dance of Death
- The Only Ray of Hope
- Divided We Stand
- Imagine
- Arafat Is Arafat
- Barking Up the Wrong Tree -- for Now
- Suspend Fire
- Bend, But Not Break
- Do As They Say, Not As They Do.
- Coming Clean
- Shattered
- Saddam 2002
- The Wholeness of a Split Identity
- The Hamas Challenge
- Battle Fatigue
- Beware the Generals
- Same Sharon, Same Dangers
- Stand Steadfast, on the Sidelines
- Going Nowhere
- A New Yalta
- The Wrong Coalition
- He's Not in Control
- A Degree of Intifada
- There is No Alternative
- Ominous Opportunity
- The Post-Twins Era
- My Brothers' Keeper
- Unhappy Anniversary
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