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hist2004
06-21-2006, 11:44 AM
Passing on Zarqawi

Behind the administration's decision not to kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2002.

by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross & Adam White

06/21/2006

BEFORE THE DUST SETTLED on the rubble that had been Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's safe house, critics of the Bush administration were already arguing that our latest battlefield success in Iraq had to be measured against the administration's failure to kill Zarqawi back in 2002. But a full understanding of the situation the administration faced when it had the opportunity to strike Zarqawi in 2002 shows that this was not a simple case of Bush administration blundering--even if, in hindsight, the decision was a mistake.

The background for this most recent criticism of the administration's performance in Iraq comes from a 2004 report that appeared in the Wall Street Journal and on NBC. In 2002, the Pentagon had formulated a plan to attack Zarqawi's operations in northern Iraq (where he had relocated after leaving Afghanistan) using cruise missiles and airstrikes. The administration didn't give a green light to this operation. The Journal quoted the criticisms of former NSC counterterrorism director Lisa Gordon-Hagerty ("I said why didn't we get that ['son of a b--'] when we could."), while NBC reported similar remarks from former NSC member Roger Cressey.

Such criticism reappeared last week in Newsweek's coverage of Zarqawi's death. The magazine attributed the decision not to strike Zarqawi to the administration's desire to "exploit" him as proof of connections between Iraq and al Qaeda.

BUT TO SUGGEST that it was a no-brainer for the U.S. to attack northern Iraq in 2002 ignores a couple of key considerations. If the administration had struck Zarqawi then, it would have met a torrent of criticism for allegedly violating international law--criticism that could have interfered with its diplomatic efforts preceding the 2003 invasion.

In 2002, Zarqawi's base in Iraq was located in the northern No-Fly Zone, a region above the 36th parallel which a U.S.-led coalition prevented Iraqi aircraft and ground forces from entering. The U.S., France, and Britain established that NFZ in April 1991, following the ceasefire that ended the Gulf War, in order to protect the inhabitants of northern Iraq from violence at the hands of Saddam's regime. (A second NFZ was established later, south of Baghdad.) The coalition cited as justification four Iraq-related U.N. Security Council Resolutions: Resolution 678 (authorizing the coalition to use "all necessary means to uphold and implement" the previous Kuwait-protection resolution"), Resolutions 686 and 687 (outlining the postwar ceasefire), and Resolution 688 (responding to "the repression of the Iraqi civilian population"). But none of these resolutions specifically provided for a NFZ.

The lack of specific authorization for a NFZ resulted in critics on both the left (such as the New York Times editorial page) and the right (such as conservative national security law scholar Scott Silliman). Throughout the 1990s, the Clinton administration maintained this controversial legal position by operating under rules of engagement that circumscribed its efforts in the northern NFZ to prevent the Iraqi government from oppressing its people or targeting coalition personnel and resources.

But in the run-up to the 2003 war, the NFZs came under even heavier criticism. Critics suspicious of the Bush administration's plans argued that the administration would use heightened engagement in the NFZs as a pretext for war.

Thus, in 2002, as the Bush administration was attempting to amass support in Congress and the U.N. Security Council for an invasion of Iraq, broader rules of engagement in the NFZ would have undermined diplomatic efforts. Secretary General Kofi Annan made clear that America's claim to authority for the NFZs was not a popular position. By September 2002, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced its position that "Anglo- American bombing raids in no-fly zones not only deepen the complicated atmosphere around Iraq but create obstacles in the search for a political-diplomatic settlement of the Iraq question." A joint press Rumsfeld-Myers press conference in September 2002, reporters peppered the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with challenges to the decision to enforce the NFZs so fiercely amidst the diplomatic process. To begin bombing installations that were not associated with Saddam's force projection in the region would have made the coalition's unpopular program even more problematic.

Previous expansions of the NFZ program had been met with fierce criticism. In 1996, when President Clinton expanded the southern NFZ, international allies (such as France) refused to cooperate with the new bombing operations. And that expansion targeted the machinery of the Hussein government; further expansion targeting Iraqi inhabitants whose connection to the government was a subject of dispute would have been more difficult to justify.

The summer before the Iraq invasion was one replete with Democrats calling for a slow debate of the Iraq issue. Rapid escalation of military operations under new rules of engagement would not have pleased those calling for restraint, including Senators Feinstein and Leahy, who introduced a resolution "expressing the sense of Congress that the United States should not use force against Iraq, outside of the existing Rules of Engagement, without specific statutory authorization or a declaration of war."

Moreover, increased bombings in the region would also have increased the risk of civilian casualties, possibly undermining Arab support for a full invasion in 2003.

BUT THE BIGGEST IRONY in the current round of second-guessing the administration's failure to strike Zarqawi in 2002 is the criticism such critics usually direct at any actual attacks carried out on foreign soil. When a January airstrike in Pakistan failed to kill its target, bin Laden deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, it was condemned as illegal and a tactical blunder, notwithstanding the fact that the attack eliminated several al Qaeda leaders.

Legal Scholars Amos Guiora and Martha Minow wrote in the Boston Globe just after the strike, "The airstrike in Damadola, Pakistan, on Jan. 13 is yet another example of how the Bush administration's policies are harming the interests of the United States. . . . By violating the sovereignty of an ally, we embarrassed a key U.S. partner in the fight against terrorism and jeopardized General Pervez Musharraf's already tenuous hold on power as president of Pakistan. . . . The violation of Pakistan's sovereignty in contravention of international law raises a red flag about what legal advice was rendered or followed prior to the attack."

Can there be any doubt that a strike against Zarqawi would have met with a similar response back in 2002?

Just as the failure to kill Zarqawi in 2002 provides context for his 2006 death, so too does the international political situation in the lead-up to the Iraq war provide context for the administration's decision not to strike. And it should be kept in mind that the current enthusiasm of administration critics for airstrikes on foreign soil will provide context for any future criticism of the practice.

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is a senior consultant for the Gerard Group International LLC. His first book, My Year Inside Radical Islam, will be published in Winter 2007 by Tarcher/Penguin. Adam White was recently a clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. He is a contributor to Intel Dump, where he writes on national security law.

© Copyright 2006, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.

Link to Article: (http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/012/340fcefr.asp)

Hist2004

2Sheds_Jackson
06-21-2006, 01:06 PM
A great article that shows that the war is easily 50% reality, 40% spin and 10% insoluble dietary fiber. Just as is done with war planning (mostly by anti-war types) motivations are twisted and nothing is ever put into it's proper temporal and situational context. If you ask me, the media pays way too much attention to bloggers who just point out nuggets here and there, which they then regurgitate sans any context in order to constantly keep up the anti-war rhetoric.

KB
06-21-2006, 04:03 PM
Passing on Zarqawi

Behind the administration's decision not to kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2002.

by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross & Adam White

06/21/2006

BEFORE THE DUST SETTLED on the rubble that had been Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's safe house, critics of the Bush administration were already arguing that our latest battlefield success in Iraq had to be measured against the administration's failure to kill Zarqawi back in 2002. But a full understanding of the situation the administration faced when it had the opportunity to strike Zarqawi in 2002 shows that this was not a simple case of Bush administration blundering--even if, in hindsight, the decision was a mistake.

The background for this most recent criticism of the administration's performance in Iraq comes from a 2004 report that appeared in the Wall Street Journal and on NBC. In 2002, the Pentagon had formulated a plan to attack Zarqawi's operations in northern Iraq (where he had relocated after leaving Afghanistan) using cruise missiles and airstrikes. The administration didn't give a green light to this operation. The Journal quoted the criticisms of former NSC counterterrorism director Lisa Gordon-Hagerty ("I said why didn't we get that ['son of a b--'] when we could."), while NBC reported similar remarks from former NSC member Roger Cressey.

Such criticism reappeared last week in Newsweek's coverage of Zarqawi's death. The magazine attributed the decision not to strike Zarqawi to the administration's desire to "exploit" him as proof of connections between Iraq and al Qaeda.

BUT TO SUGGEST that it was a no-brainer for the U.S. to attack northern Iraq in 2002 ignores a couple of key considerations. If the administration had struck Zarqawi then, it would have met a torrent of criticism for allegedly violating international law--criticism that could have interfered with its diplomatic efforts preceding the 2003 invasion.

In 2002, Zarqawi's base in Iraq was located in the northern No-Fly Zone, a region above the 36th parallel which a U.S.-led coalition prevented Iraqi aircraft and ground forces from entering. The U.S., France, and Britain established that NFZ in April 1991, following the ceasefire that ended the Gulf War, in order to protect the inhabitants of northern Iraq from violence at the hands of Saddam's regime. (A second NFZ was established later, south of Baghdad.) The coalition cited as justification four Iraq-related U.N. Security Council Resolutions: Resolution 678 (authorizing the coalition to use "all necessary means to uphold and implement" the previous Kuwait-protection resolution"), Resolutions 686 and 687 (outlining the postwar ceasefire), and Resolution 688 (responding to "the repression of the Iraqi civilian population"). But none of these resolutions specifically provided for a NFZ.

The lack of specific authorization for a NFZ resulted in critics on both the left (such as the New York Times editorial page) and the right (such as conservative national security law scholar Scott Silliman). Throughout the 1990s, the Clinton administration maintained this controversial legal position by operating under rules of engagement that circumscribed its efforts in the northern NFZ to prevent the Iraqi government from oppressing its people or targeting coalition personnel and resources.

But in the run-up to the 2003 war, the NFZs came under even heavier criticism. Critics suspicious of the Bush administration's plans argued that the administration would use heightened engagement in the NFZs as a pretext for war.

Thus, in 2002, as the Bush administration was attempting to amass support in Congress and the U.N. Security Council for an invasion of Iraq, broader rules of engagement in the NFZ would have undermined diplomatic efforts. Secretary General Kofi Annan made clear that America's claim to authority for the NFZs was not a popular position. By September 2002, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced its position that "Anglo- American bombing raids in no-fly zones not only deepen the complicated atmosphere around Iraq but create obstacles in the search for a political-diplomatic settlement of the Iraq question." A joint press Rumsfeld-Myers press conference in September 2002, reporters peppered the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with challenges to the decision to enforce the NFZs so fiercely amidst the diplomatic process. To begin bombing installations that were not associated with Saddam's force projection in the region would have made the coalition's unpopular program even more problematic.

Previous expansions of the NFZ program had been met with fierce criticism. In 1996, when President Clinton expanded the southern NFZ, international allies (such as France) refused to cooperate with the new bombing operations. And that expansion targeted the machinery of the Hussein government; further expansion targeting Iraqi inhabitants whose connection to the government was a subject of dispute would have been more difficult to justify.

The summer before the Iraq invasion was one replete with Democrats calling for a slow debate of the Iraq issue. Rapid escalation of military operations under new rules of engagement would not have pleased those calling for restraint, including Senators Feinstein and Leahy, who introduced a resolution "expressing the sense of Congress that the United States should not use force against Iraq, outside of the existing Rules of Engagement, without specific statutory authorization or a declaration of war."

Moreover, increased bombings in the region would also have increased the risk of civilian casualties, possibly undermining Arab support for a full invasion in 2003.

BUT THE BIGGEST IRONY in the current round of second-guessing the administration's failure to strike Zarqawi in 2002 is the criticism such critics usually direct at any actual attacks carried out on foreign soil. When a January airstrike in Pakistan failed to kill its target, bin Laden deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, it was condemned as illegal and a tactical blunder, notwithstanding the fact that the attack eliminated several al Qaeda leaders.

Legal Scholars Amos Guiora and Martha Minow wrote in the Boston Globe just after the strike, "The airstrike in Damadola, Pakistan, on Jan. 13 is yet another example of how the Bush administration's policies are harming the interests of the United States. . . . By violating the sovereignty of an ally, we embarrassed a key U.S. partner in the fight against terrorism and jeopardized General Pervez Musharraf's already tenuous hold on power as president of Pakistan. . . . The violation of Pakistan's sovereignty in contravention of international law raises a red flag about what legal advice was rendered or followed prior to the attack."

Can there be any doubt that a strike against Zarqawi would have met with a similar response back in 2002?

Just as the failure to kill Zarqawi in 2002 provides context for his 2006 death, so too does the international political situation in the lead-up to the Iraq war provide context for the administration's decision not to strike. And it should be kept in mind that the current enthusiasm of administration critics for airstrikes on foreign soil will provide context for any future criticism of the practice.

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is a senior consultant for the Gerard Group International LLC. His first book, My Year Inside Radical Islam, will be published in Winter 2007 by Tarcher/Penguin. Adam White was recently a clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. He is a contributor to Intel Dump, where he writes on national security law.

© Copyright 2006, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.

Link to Article: (http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/012/340fcefr.asp)

Hist2004

The US has operated freely in the Kurdish enclave since 1991...as have the Israelis. If they wanted to get him, they could have...or paid the Kurds to do it.

ElHombre
06-21-2006, 04:04 PM
If the administration had struck Zarqawi then, it would have met a torrent of criticism for allegedly violating international law--criticism that could have interfered with its diplomatic efforts preceding the 2003 invasion.

sorry, that doesn't pass the smell test. they're trying to say that international law (which the admin already had a habit of thumbing its nose at) prevented them from attacking an AQ base. no one at the WH thought of saying, 'there's a known AQ base there. we're going to hit it.'? that doesn't make sense. they connected anything they wanted to hit with AQ, what kept them from tying AQ with this?

BlackRain
06-21-2006, 04:07 PM
A great article that shows that the war is easily 50% reality, 40% spin and 10% insoluble dietary fiber. Just as is done with war planning (mostly by anti-war types) motivations are twisted and nothing is ever put into it's proper temporal and situational context. If you ask me, the media pays way too much attention to bloggers who just point out nuggets here and there, which they then regurgitate sans any context in order to constantly keep up the anti-war rhetoric.

Don't waste your time.

These folkings complaining about why we didn't kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2002 are the same ones saying their where no terrorists in Iraq prior to the invasion of Iraq.

Don't you know there was no connection between Iraq and the war on terror?

ElHombre
06-21-2006, 04:18 PM
These folkings complaining about why we didn't kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2002 are the same ones saying their where no terrorists in Iraq prior to the invasion of Iraq.

did you read the article? zarqawi was in the northern no-fly zone: a region that SH didn't control.

Daniel1115
06-21-2006, 04:21 PM
These folkings complaining about why we didn't kill Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in 2002 are the same ones saying their where no terrorists in Iraq prior to the invasion of Iraq.X2 and QFT.

BlackRain
06-21-2006, 04:22 PM
did you read the article? zarqawi was in the northern no-fly zone: a region that SH didn't control.

A northern no-fly zone in what country was it again?

Starts with an "I".....

Saddam did not control the airspace in no-fly zones BUT Saddam did control the land.

Just as the Marsh Arabs in southern Iraq near the Tigris-Euphrates Rivers.

Secret Squirrel
06-21-2006, 04:45 PM
A northern no-fly zone in what country was it again?

Starts with an "I".....

Saddam did not control the airspace in no-fly zones BUT Saddam did control the land.

Just as the Marsh Arabs in southern Iraq near the Tigris-Euphrates Rivers.

Actually he didnt. ;)

BlackRain
06-21-2006, 04:53 PM
Actually he didnt. ;)

These are cold hard facts -- not simple opinions.


Although the 1994 UNSC Resolution 949 ordered Saddam not to enhance his military presence in the south, he has been free to operate throughout that area with the substantial forces already present there before the resolution.

As a result, the Iraqi government has actively persecuted the Shi'a minority and drained the marshes that had supported their villages for centuries. These actions, combined with artillery attacks, have reportedly reduced the Shi'a population in the marsh region by 75 percent over the past few years.

Secret Squirrel
06-21-2006, 04:58 PM
These are cold hard facts -- not simple opinions.

North is a different word than south. Each word also has a different definition. Cold hard facts instead of poor reading skills. ;)

2Sheds_Jackson
06-21-2006, 05:10 PM
These are cold hard facts -- not simple opinions.

Heh, as somebody recently told me - don't waste your time. We both know that if we tried to get him in 2002, the same people would find ample room for criticism, whether the raid was a success or not. It would range from "open aggression", "acting without the UN", "illegal act", "murdering civilians in peaceful territory" to "bumbling incompetence". As always, it has nothing to do with the subject at hand, but who is directing it. The mere fact that they would rather bitch about why we didn't get him sooner, than rejoice in the fact that we did eventually get him, is extremely telling. Whatever it takes to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

BlackRain
06-21-2006, 05:15 PM
North is a different word than south. Each word also has a different definition. Cold hard facts instead of poor reading skills. ;)

So if I find one single documented instance where Saddam's troops were active in the Northern Fly Zone region, you will admit you were wrong?

This will disprove your assertion that he was not in control of the North.

I have already proved that Saddam will still maiming and killing in the Southern Watch Area already.



Operation Northern Watch (ONW) in 1996 -- was originally designed to support humanitarian efforts by limiting Iraqi military capabilities north of the thirty-sixth parallel.

Aircraft were assigned to protect humanitarian operations on the ground, covering U.S. military and aid personnel in the event that they had to flee an attack by Saddam's forces, which did indeed occur in 1996.

Although the no-fly zone may have benefited the Kurds in northern Iraq by preventing Saddam from using his aircraft against them, no direct ground support was promised or provided.


Riddle me this?

If Saddam was not in military control of Northern Iraq, why were we bombing his military hardware there? Were we lying about that too?

April 30, 1999 -- Operation Northern Watch (ONW) F-15E Strike Eagles and F-16C Falcons dropped GBU-12 laser-guided bombs on Iraqi radar and anti-aircraft artillery sites south and northeast of Mosul. In addition, U.S. Air Force F-16CJ Falcons launched AGM-88 high-speed anti-radiation missiles (HARM) at Iraqi radar and anti-aircraft artillery sites south and northeast of Mosul.

Secret Squirrel
06-21-2006, 05:21 PM
So if I find one single documented instance where Saddam's troops were active in the Northern Fly Zone region, you will admit you were wrong?

This will disprove your assertion that he was not in control of the North.

I have already proved that Saddam will still maiming and killing in the Southern Watch Area already.

From your source;

Saddam seems to believe that the northern no-fly zone has placed restrictions on his military forces. Fortunately, there are additional disincentives to his invasion of Kurdish territory. For example, Saddam's current lack of resources may lead him to restrict his limited forces to areas that he can more easily control. After all, even though the Kurdish forces are mostly infantry troops armed only with mortars (and, perhaps, some artillery), Kurds with antitank weapons would probably inflict significant losses on Saddam's heavy armor -- his primary military strength -- as it attempted to negotiate the mountainous terrain. Additionally, Saddam may worry that military action in northern Iraq would cause a reaction from neighboring states, particularly if it created a Kurdish refugee problem that flowed into eastern Turkey or northwestern Iran.

The coalition is currently in Iraq but it sure as hell doesnt control it.;)
And just to help you along, I've noted some key words, without all the other words so you dont get confused: Zarqawi, Northern Iraq, Kurds, No-Fly Zone. :D

KB
06-21-2006, 05:48 PM
Saddam launched the Republican Guard into the NFZ in 1995 to squelch a coup attempt. Robert Baer writes about this in his book "See No Evil".

In 2002 the US was bombing Iraq at will; the US was on a running start to degrade the Iraqi air defenses before OIF began. No reason why a few LGBs/JDAMs/TLAMs couldn't have landed on Zarqawi while he was hanging in out in Sulamanniyah with his buddies in Ansar al Islam. "OOPs, we thought there was a SAM site there-our bad!"

Atlantic Friend
06-21-2006, 05:55 PM
In true bipartisan spirit, let's sum it all up like that :

Pres. Clinton decides not to order the capture or assassination of Osama Ben Laden : "It was a colossal blunder (Reps)" ; "it was because of fear for international criticism" (Dems)


Pres. Bush decides not to order the capture or assassination of Zarqawi : "It was a colossal blunder !" (Dems) ; "Hey, he was forced to do that to avoid international criticism !" (Reps)

;)

HOLLiS
06-21-2006, 07:00 PM
In true bipartisan spirit, let's sum it all up like that :

Pres. Clinton decides not to order the capture or assassination of Osama Ben Laden : "It was a colossal blunder (Reps)" ; "it was because of fear for international criticism" (Dems)


Pres. Bush decides not to order the capture or assassination of Zarqawi : "It was a colossal blunder !" (Dems) ; "Hey, he was forced to do that to avoid international criticism !" (Reps)

;)

That is not a Bipartisan Split!!! That is true Bipartisan agreement. Just gotta love partisan politics, But wait you think it is bad now, wait till election time rolls near.