Turning The Iraq Tide, From The Bottom Up
Former Marine, Author Says The Perspective of Grunts On The Ground, And A Visionary Sunni Sheik, Reversed Course Of War
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Play CBS Video Video Ground View Of The Iraq War Former Marine and writer Bing West has spent a total of 20 months with American forces in Iraq. West tells David Martin that military strategy is finally turning Iraq around because leaders are listening to U.S. troops.
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(AP)
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Interactive Iraq: 5 Years At War Five years after the U.S.-led invasion, the war wears on.
The wealth and leisure of Newport, Rhode Island are about as far removed from Iraq as you can get.
Bing West lives here among the mega-yachts and mansions, yet it is Iraq which keeps drawing him back.
"I'm a writer," he told Martin. "I wanted to see for myself how this war was unfolding and at my age I had the opportunity to do it, and so I took the opportunity."
"But some people might say: 'Exactly, at your age, you're living the good life, why? Why do you need to do this?'" Martin asked.
"I think somebody should try to tell the story from the perspective of somebody who has fought an insurgency, who understands it," West said.
West was a Marine in Vietnam, and wrote a book about it, "The Village," which is now considered a classic work on counterinsurgency. But his exposure to what happens on a battlefield goes back further than that.
As a toddler he paraded not with a toy gun, but with a captured Japanese rifle.
"I was born during World War II and my uncles were Marines, and whenever they would come back from the islands, Iwo Jima and Okinawa and Guadacanal, my mother used to put me upstairs, playing with them, with the Marines. So to a large extent (laugh) I was raised by Marines!"

"We were in the middle of the tank column, in a yellow SUV, with a close-up view - too close."
What he recorded was a grunt's eye view of the war, with all its implausibilities.
"We saw bizarre things, like this shepherd and his sheep walking in the middle of a firefight."
His latest book, "The Strongest Tribe: War, Politics, and the Endgame in Iraq" (Random House), is the product of 20 months on the front lines in Iraq. It's a bottom-up view of the war, which West believes is the only view that matters.
"This is not a book about great men," he said. "This is not a book about how terrific or how bad President Bush was, or General Petraeus. They didn't win or lose the war. The war was fought at that people level, at the ground level."
And it tells a very different story from the memoirs and inside-the-Oval Office exposes that have been written so far.
"When I hear people say, 'We just needed more troops,' I'd say, 'What were you gonna do with those troops when you didn't have a plan, you didn't have a strategy, you didn't have a doctrine, and you had poor leaders at the top who didn't "get it," didn't understand the situation?'"
West says the only ones who did "get it" were mid-ranking officers.
"They believed they understood the situation. They were the ones out there, but they weren't listened to."

"Did he agree with you?" Martin asked.
"Yes."
Yet, says West, Casey saw no need to change course.
"From start to finish, Casey's strategy was not victory, not to prevail, but to turn the war over to the Iraqis and have them settle it for themselves."
It was a no-win strategy, but the U.S. stuck with it - even as the specter of defeat loomed over the Bush administration.
"By June of 2006, from the president on down, there was high misgivings whether we were losing. And we were losing in the Baghdad area," West said.
Yet it would take seven more months for the president's war cabinet to come up with a new strategy.
"Could we have lost in terms of the morale of our own soldiers sagging to the point that it would have infected our Congress and everything else? Yes, probably," West said. "It was a close run thing."
"It was in those dark days that the first and perhaps only great leader of the Iraq war stepped forward - and he wasn't an American. He was Sheik Abu Resa Sattar.

And 99 out of 100 Americans have never heard of him.
"Correct. He was really exceptional."
Sattar was assassinated shortly after this meeting with President Bush. But that didn't stop what became known as the Great Awakening of the Sunni tribes in western Iraq.
"And as the Sunni tribes came over and began to say, 'He's al Qaeda … he's al Qaeda …' it just tilted, and al Qaeda had no place to hide."
It was a stunning turnaround. After three years of fighting against the tribes, the Marines joined forces with their former enemies to hunt down al Qaeda. It was the first inkling of a winning strategy - and once again it came from the bottom-up.
"So we actually were learning," Martin said.
"You can't b---s--- the guy who's out there on patrol," West said. "After a while, he begins to get it, to really get it."
But the eastern front - Baghdad and surroundings - was still in flames. This time the president's national security advisor, a civilian who looks more like an accountant than a warrior, stepped into the breach.

And what does that say about military leadership, that it falls to a civilian to come up with a strategy that turns the tide, Martin asked.
"I believe it said about our military at the time that they were unwilling to look at radical change at a time when they should have looked at the radical change."
That radical change was, of course, the surge - sending five more combat brigades into Baghdad - everything the Army had left - plus a new commander, David Pretraeus.
"He took one look at the changed conditions in Anbar and said, 'What's going on here?' And they said, 'Well, the tribes are now with us.' Just like that, he got it. He said, 'I get it,' and he went back to Baghdad and said, 'What they're doing out in the western frontier, that's what we have to be doing here.'"
"His brilliance was recognizing success and reinforcing it," Martin said.
"Correct, correct."
It took nearly four years, West says, for the leaders to absorb the wisdom of the troops on the ground.
"What this war again showed is, you get into a war, you're getting down to the grunts. You're getting down to these groups of Marines and soldiers who are their own small tribes. I don't know where they come from. They're less than one-half of one percent of our population, but somehow they find each other, pull together."
"They're the same kids that were babysitting for you when you were two and three years old," Martin said.
"Correct, correct," West said. "Somehow, despite all our mistakes, this country still finds them."
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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Critics of the war advocate long-term success as national policy--and invading Iraq is a non-starter. As you point out, if pulling out the troops does nothing to change local politics, we must ask, why have American troops there, at all?
Bush, Cheney and certain advisers, however, are naive neocon militarists with an ulterior agenda, and focused on Iraq well before 911. Cheney acknowledged before his secret 2001 meeting wiith the oil majors (to craft a "national energy policy") that Iraq was the last largely untapped asset in the geopolitical scramble for oil. It was clear Bush and Cheney intended to capture Iraq first-- no matter what means, fair or foul, would be required.
What supporters of the Iraq invasion never understood is military occupation is not a sustainable option for this country. We are not a colonial power, and cannot justify any pretext for the occupation offered by Bush-- especially his bogus claims of national security.
Bush has led the country on a consistent path to disaster. Our blood and treasure have been spent at a profligate rate by the same Bush who inherited a budget surplus in 2001. Bush neary doubled the national debt because he refused to raise taxes to pay for his war. But the costs have been incurred, and must be paid. The cost of Bush''s war will be passed along to the next president (regardless of party).
What has to be done to honor the sacrifice of our servicemen in Iraq is to break our dependence on foreign oil forever. We can not drill our way out with only 3% of the world''s oil reserves and 25% of the demand. We need to adopt an Al Gore/T.Boone Pickens approach and invest in huge windfarms on the Plains states, solar in the desert southwest, smart electric grids, and natural gas for trucks with cars going to all electric plugin or plugin hybrid types that get at least 50 MPG plus.
The US Federal Government must make a strategic shift away from imported oil from unstable parts of the globe. The cycle of death, killing, terrorism, and economic boom to bust to bankruptcy will never end until we quit depending on imported oil forever.
Guerrilla and counter-terrorist wars need diplomats, foreign area officers, and civil affairs administrators who are all in agreement to a common political goal backed up by a strategy to make it happen. Counterinsurgency warfare is about as complex of a subject that you can find. The benefits of having the local tribes on your side will allow you to destroy terrorists fairly quickly because they have no where to hide. If you fail to win the local tribes over you will be chasing ghosts literally forever because the bad guys will always have a place to hide. George Bush and *** Cheney should have served as infantryman out on patrol in Vietnam. Then they would be like Senators Chuck Hagel and John Kerry. They would actually understand what they bit off when we invaded Iraq in 2003 instead of the bogus neoconservative rubbish they turned out totally wrong.
Posted by gce65 at 07:18 PM : Sep 07, 2008
You are right to some extent. But, hindsight is always 20/20. We are doing a lot of good over there right now. Since some of the Iraqi people got their heads together and went to turning in the trouble makers, things have been coming together for the good of everyone.
Posted by Demongirl60 at 06:54 PM : Sep 07, 2008
I feel that you 100% right...
There was WMD in Iraq. Saddam had used them on his own people. How about the Russian Fighter Jets that were found covered with sand in the desert? When we first went into the WAR Saddam%u2019s own Generals thought that they had WMD%u2019s that they could use against us.
I feel that people are being held accountable to a great degree.
Posted by downsteamjim at 05:21 PM : Sep 07, 2008
YOU HAVE MADE A VERY POSITIVE POINT HERE. I JUST WISH THAT THE LIBERALS WOULD BE QUITE AND LET THE MILITARY DO THEIR JOB.
Posted by andrew_693 at 05:03 PM : Sep 07, 2008
Sounds just like another "Liberal" to me. We are making progress in Iraq. Listen to the men on the ground and you may be able to figure it all out.
Sunni regions were considerably less organized than the Shiite and Kurdish regions because of their initial violence levels and non-participation were not aided with the passage of the Reconciliation Law. The Reconciliation Law (a falsely claimed success), intended to reinstate qualified Sunnis excluded in the initial post-war setup of the government, backfired as significant numbers of "previously qualified" Sunnis were disqualified (not expected) and fewer "previously disqualified" Sunnis were reinstated than expected.
Further indications of failure came with the backsliding provincial elections (another claimed success) as first delayed and then canceled for 2008. The Sunnis remain under represented and their regions remain disorganized due to a boycott of the national elections and the cancellation of provincial elections.
The formal sharing of oil revenues between the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds is only a interim agreement as the Oil Law is not completed.
Sunnis insurgents (most are still disqualified by the government) were paid and guaranteed future jobs (government) by US forces in exchange for their cooperation (the "Anbar Awakening") cannot be satisfied with the proceeding issues. Especially considering the risks associated with the pending withdrawal of US troops, opening the real possibility for civil war a between the factions considering all the unresolved issues.
Does this even sound like success or diplomatic failure?
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