Sandy Berger Headlines
Spout Off (Cape May County Herald) October 10, 2008, 3:17 pm EDT What responsility does the press have to report unbiased and accurately? It's diasppointing to be at a meeting and see what is and isn't reported, even how it is stated. How much does the attitude of the press erode public involvement over time? |
Spout Off (Cape May County Herald) October 10, 2008, 2:17 pm EDT What responsility does the press have to report unbiased and accurately? It's diasppointing to be at a meeting and see what is and isn't reported, even how it is stated. How much does the attitude of the press erode public involvement over time? |
American Agri-Women to convene in San, Antonio (High Plains Journal) October 10, 2008, 12:25 pm EDT The 33rd Annual National American Agri-Women's Convention will be held in beautiful San Antonio, Texas, Nov. 5 to 9, 2008, at the historic Menger Hotel just steps from the infamous Alamo. |
Issue Of Presidential Candidates Health Has Evolved (CBS News) October 10, 2008, 8:18 am EDT The importance of the age and health of presidential candidates has changed in recent years ? from Franklin D. Roosevelt to John F. Kennedy and now to John McCain. ?The collective health of the president and vice president is important because, ... |
Obama tried to sway Iraqis on Bush deal (The Washington Times) October 10, 2008, 5:01 am EDT EXCLUSIVE -- While the Bush administration was negotiating a still elusive deal to keep the U.S. military in Iraq, sources told the Times that Sen. Barack Obama urged Baghdad to delay it until next year. |
Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter to Speak in SB (Santa Barbara Independent) October 10, 2008, 12:08 am EDT Newsweek ’s political pundit Jonathan Alter to speak in S.B. |
A checkered 'Path' (The Hollywood Reporter) October 8, 2008, 11:10 pm EDT Why is a documentary about a popular ABC miniseries hitting store shelves while the miniseries itself is unavailable on DVD? |
9/11 documentary targets Disney, Clinton (Reuters via Yahoo! News) October 8, 2008, 9:28 pm EDT If Cyrus Nowrasteh wants to work for Disney again, he's got a funny way of showing it. |
Back Pocket
- The Samuel “Sandy” Berger Scandals
(Feb 03, 2007)
- The Events Leading to the Sandy Berger Scandal
(Jan 30, 2007)
- Twirling the Cognitive Kaleidoscope
(Jan 25, 2006)
- Be Vigilant
(Jan 23, 2006)
- Nuclear Saber Rattling
(Jan 22, 2006)
- John Stossel takes flak over Education Spending
(Jan 18, 2006)
- Kennedy's Children's Book
(Jan 17, 2006)
- Specter Walks the Line
(Jan 15, 2006)
- You say Alito I say Alioto
(Jan 09, 2006)
- 10 Foolish Myths
(Dec 28, 2005)
Past Articles
- Tuesday, December 27
- A Pay Raise for Senator PorkBarrel (0)
- Thursday, December 01
- Iraq Strategy: Executive Summary (13)
- Wednesday, November 09
- The Fair Tax - An Overview (0)
- Monday, September 12
- Take Back the Memorial (37)
- Friday, September 09
- Presidents are not perfect (37)
- Katrina Relief Effort (0)
- Saturday, September 03
- Hillary Clinton: Democrats Are Betting On the Wrong Horse (78)
- Friday, September 02
- Instantly Pinpoint Your Political Identity (38)
- Friday, August 26
- Pat Robertson the Assasinator... (43)
- Thursday, August 25
- You can lead the media to a proud military mom, but you can't make them think. (19)
Older articles
|
|
Posted by: archiveguard on Dec 01, 2005 - 08:22 PM
OUR NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR VICTORY IN IRAQ:
Helping the Iraqi People Defeat the Terrorists and
Build an Inclusive Democratic State
"America's task in Iraq is not only to defeat an enemy, it is to give
strength to a friend -- a free, representative government that serves its people
and fights on their behalf."
-- President George W. Bush
May 24, 2004
Index |
Summary |
Part I |
Part II |
8 PillarsTHE POLITICAL TRACK IN DETAIL
Strategic Summary: Isolate, Engage, Build
- The political track of our strategy is based on six core
assumptions:
- First, like people in all parts of the world, from
all cultures and religions, when given the opportunity, the Iraqi people
prefer to live in freedom rather than under tyranny.
- Second, a critical mass of Iraqis in all areas of
the country will not embrace the perverse vision offered by the
terrorists. Most rejectionists can over time be persuaded to no longer
seek the privileges of dictatorship -- and in exchange will embrace the
rewards of democratic stability.
- Third, an enduring democracy is not built through
elections alone: critical components include transparent, effective
institutions and a national constitutional compact.
- Fourth, federalism is not a precursor to the
breakup of Iraq, but instead is a prerequisite for a united country and
better governance. Federalism allows a strong central government to
exercise the powers of a sovereign state, while enabling regional bodies
to make decisions that protect the interests of local populations.
- Fifth, it is in the fundamental interests of all
Iraqi communities -- and of the region -- that Iraq stays a united
country. This shared objective creates space for compromise across
ethnic and religious divides and for the steady growth of national
institutions.
- Sixth, Iraq needs and can receive the support of
the region and the international community to solidify its successes.
STRATEGIC LOGIC BEHIND THE POLITICAL TRACK
- Our efforts and those of the Iraqis on the political track are geared
toward isolating hard-core rejectionists by expanding avenues for political
participation at all levels of government, engaging the region and all Iraqi
communities to demonstrate that there is a place for all groups in the new
Iraq, and building national Iraqi institutions and international support to
advance the rule of law and offer the Iraqi people a solid framework for a
better and more peaceful future.
- How will this help the Iraqis -- with Coalition support -- defeat
the enemy and achieve our larger goals?
- Progress in the political process -- meeting political
benchmarks -- will provide momentum against the insurgency and
indicate to people "on the fence" that the old regime has passed and
that the effort to build a new Iraq will succeed.
- Inclusive institutions that offer power-sharing mechanisms and
minority protections will demonstrate to disaffected Sunnis that
they have influence and the ability to protect their interests in a
democratic Iraq.
- Commitment to democracy -- rather than other forms of governance
-- not only is consistent with our values, but is essential to
keeping the long-oppressed Shi'a and Kurds as our partners in Iraq.
- Increasingly robust Iraqi political institutions expose the
falsity of enemy propaganda that Iraq is "under occupation," with
decisions being made by non-Iraqis. Such institutions also provide
peaceful means for reconciliation and bridging divides.
- Due to the historical, cultural, political, and economic links
between Iraq and its neighbors, many surrounding countries can help
Iraq secure its borders and encourage Sunni rejectionists to
renounce violence and enter the political process.
- Expanding international support for Iraq will demonstrate to
Iraqis and the world that Iraq is a valuable member of the
international community and will further broaden the political and
economic support provided to Iraq.
PROGRESS ON THE POLITICAL TRACK
- Our Isolate, Engage, and Build strategy is
working: Iraqis have hit every political benchmark in their transitional
political process -- and are on track to hit the next one: elections in
December to select a four-year government under a democratic constitution,
with full participation from all of Iraq's main ethnic and religious
communities.
- In January, 8.5 million Iraqis defied terrorist threats to vote for
Iraq's first freely elected national government and provincial
governments.
- In April, the elected leaders of Iraq's national legislature came
together to form a diverse cabinet that represented all groups, despite
election results that heavily favored the Shi'a and Kurdish communities.
- In June, the national legislature formally invited non-elected Sunni
Arab leaders to join constitutional negotiations, demonstrating that
leaders from all communities understood the importance of a constitution
with input from Iraq's major groups.
- In summer/autumn 2005, Iraq's elected national legislature -- and
the Sunni leaders invited to join the process -- drafted a constitution
that was a huge step for Iraq and the region. This draft constitution
invests the sovereignty of Iraq in the people and their right to vote,
protects individual rights and religious freedoms, and puts forward
sophisticated institutional arrangements to safeguard minority rights.
- By the end of September 2005, approximately one million new voters
came forward to check their names on Iraq's voting rolls -- the vast
majority in Sunni areas. In October, nearly 10 million Iraqis from all
areas of the country again defied terrorist threats to vote in the
constitutional referendum. The constitution was ratified.
- Interest in the political process is stronger than ever. More than
300 parties and coalitions are registered for the December elections,
and even those who opposed the constitution have organized for the
December vote.
- In a strategic shift, Sunnis are turning to the political process to
advance their interests. During the constitutional referendum, turnout
in Sunni areas was strong. Although many Sunnis voted against the
constitution, amendments made days before the referendum in response to
Sunni requests will permit further changes after the new government is
established. This and other provisions of the constitution that defer
important issues to the new assembly will ensure that elected Sunni
leaders are able to influence the shape of the Iraqi state.
- A recent change in the electoral process also provides all Iraqis a
place in the new assembly. In the January 2005 election, representation
in the assembly was directly related to turnout, which led to the
depressed Sunni numbers in the body. Today's electoral system allocates
representation by province, which guarantees that even if communities go
to the polls in varying strengths, they will all have representation in
the new assembly.
- Signs of a vibrant political life are sprouting. The constitutional
drafting committee received more than 500,000 public comments on various
provisions. More than 100 newspapers freely discuss political events
every day in Iraq. Campaign posters are displayed openly and in
increasing number in most of Iraq's major cities.
- As Iraq's political institutions mature, its judicial system has become
an independent branch, better able to promote the rule of law:
- Iraq's judiciary is organized by an independent council of judges,
as in most civil law countries. Saddam Hussein's system of "secret
courts" has been abolished.
- One year ago, the Central Criminal Court of Iraq had capacity to
prosecute fewer than 10 trials and investigative hearings per month. In
the first two weeks of September 2005 alone, the Court prosecuted more
than 50 multi-defendant trials, and conducted over 100 investigative
hearings. The Court is now expanding its reach throughout Iraq with
separate branches in local provinces.
- Hundreds of judges have been trained since the fall of Saddam
Hussein. These judges are now working and resolving cases under Iraqi
law. In 2003, approximately 4,000 felony cases were resolved in Iraqi
courts. In 2004, they resolved more than twice that number. This year,
Iraqi courts are on track to resolve more than 10,000 felony cases.
- International support for Iraq's political development is also growing:
- The United Nations Security Council has enacted a series of
unanimous resolutions that authorize the presence of Coalition forces
and anchor the Iraqi political process with international backing. In
November, the United Nations Security Council passed resolution 1637,
which -- at the request of the Iraqi government -- unanimously extended
authorization for the Coalition forces to operate in Iraq.
- The United Nations is also playing an important role in Iraq's
political transition, and plans to expand its capacity with hundreds of
personnel located throughout the country. The Arab League, the European
Union, and other important regional actors are all engaged and working
to support the Iraqi political process.
- Iraq is winning wider support from its fellow Arab states as well.
In November, the Arab League hosted a meeting in Cairo to promote Iraqi
national reconciliation and the political process; Iraqi leaders are
being received by Arab heads of state; and many Arab countries publicly
supported Iraq's constitutional referendum and called for the broad
participation of all Iraqis in Iraq's political process.
- At the same time, change is coming to the region, with Syrian
occupation ended and democracy emerging in Lebanon, and free elections
and new leadership in the Palestinian Territories. From Kuwait to
Morocco, Jordan, and Egypt, there are stirrings of political pluralism,
often for the first time in generations.
CONTINUED CHALLENGES IN THE POLITICAL SPHERE
- Even with this solid progress, we and our Iraqi partners continue to
face multiple challenges in the political sphere, including:
- Ensuring that those who join the political process leave behind
violence entirely;
- Building national institutions when past divisions and current
suspicions have led many Iraqis to look to regional or sectarian bodies
to protect their interests;
- Nurturing a culture of reconciliation, human rights, and
transparency in a society scarred by three decades of arbitrary violence
and rampant corruption;
- Building political movements based on issues and platforms, instead
of identity;
- Encouraging cooperation across ethnic, religious and tribal divides
when many wounds are still fresh and have been exacerbated by recent
hardships;
- Convincing all regional states to welcome and actively support the
new Iraqi state politically and financially;
- Building ministerial capacity to advance effective government and
reduce corruption.
THE SECURITY TRACK IN DETAIL
Strategic Summary: Clear, Hold, Build
- The security track is based on six core assumptions:
- First, the terrorists, Saddamists, and
rejectionists do not have the manpower or firepower to achieve a
military victory over the Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces. They can
win only if we surrender.
- Second, our own political will is steadfast and
will allow America to keep troops in Iraq -- to fight terrorists while
training and mentoring Iraqi forces -- until the mission is done,
increasing or decreasing troop levels only as conditions warrant.
- Third, progress on the political front will improve
the intelligence picture by helping distinguish those who can be won
over to support the new Iraqi state from the terrorists and insurgents
who must either be killed or captured, detained, and prosecuted.
- Fourth, the training, equipping, and mentoring of
Iraqi Security Forces will produce an army and police force capable of
independently providing security and maintaining public order in Iraq.
- Fifth, regional meddling and infiltrations can be
contained and/or neutralized.
- Sixth, while we can help, assist, and train, Iraqis
will ultimately be the ones to eliminate their security threats over the
long term.
STRATEGIC LOGIC BEHIND SECURITY TRACK
- We are helping the Iraqi Security Forces and the Iraqi government
take territory out of enemy control (clear); keep and
consolidate the influence of the Iraqi government afterwards (hold);
and establish new local institutions that advance civil society and the rule
of law in areas formerly under enemy influence and control (build).
- Efforts on the security track include offensive operations against
the enemy, protection of key communication and infrastructure nodes,
post-conflict stabilization operations, and the training, equipping, and
mentoring of Iraqi Security Forces. Coalition transition teams are
embedded in all Iraqi Army battalions to provide assistance and guidance
when needed.
- The model that works is clear -- it is resource intensive, requires
commitment and resolve, and involves tools across the civilian and military
spectrum, including:
- The right balance of Coalition and Iraqi forces conducting offensive
operations;
- Preparation for such operations through contact and negotiation
between local and federal Iraqi government officials;
- Adequate Iraqi forces to provide security for the population and
guard against future intimidation;
- Cooperation with and support for local institutions to govern after
Coalition forces leave;
- Prompt disbursal of aid for quick and visible reconstruction;
- Central government authorities who pay attention to local needs.
- How will this help the Iraqis -- with Coalition support -- defeat the
enemy and achieve our larger goals?
- Offensive operations disrupt enemy networks and deprive enemy elements
of safe havens from which they can rest, train, rearm, and plan attacks
against the Coalition, the Iraqi government, and Iraqi civilians.
- Localized post-conflict operations -- providing security, economic
assistance, and support to civilian institutions in newly cleared areas --
further isolate enemy elements from the rest of the population and give
Iraqis space to participate in a peaceful political process.
- Infrastructure protection helps ensure that the Iraqi government can
collect revenues and provide basic services to the people, which is critical
to building confidence in the government and weaning support away from
insurgents.
- Putting capable Iraqis forward in the fight increases the overall
effectiveness of U.S.-Iraqi operations, as Iraqis are better able to collect
intelligence and identify threats in their neighborhoods.
- As Iraqi forces become more and more capable, our military posture will
shift, leaving Coalition forces increasingly focused on specialized
counter-terrorism missions to hunt, capture, and kill terrorist leaders and
break up their funding and resource networks.
PROGRESS ON THE SECURITY TRACK
- Our clear, hold, and build
strategy is working:
- Significant progress has been made in wresting territory
from enemy control. During much of 2004, major parts of
Iraq and important urban centers were no-go areas for Iraqi and
Coalition forces. Fallujah, Najaf, and Samara were under enemy control.
Today, these cities are under Iraqi government control, and the
political process is taking hold. Outside of major urban areas, Iraqi
and Coalition forces are clearing out hard core enemy elements,
maintaining a security presence, and building local institutions to
advance local reconstruction and civil society.
- Actionable intelligence is improving. Due
to greater confidence in the Iraqi state and growing frustration with
the terrorists, Saddamists, and rejectionists, Iraqi citizens are
providing more intelligence to Iraqis and Coalition forces. In March
2005, Iraqi and Coalition forces received more than 400 intelligence
tips from Iraqi citizens; in August, they received 3,300, and in
September more than 4,700.
- Iraqi forces are growing in number. As of
November 2005, there were more than 212,000 trained and equipped Iraqi
Security Forces, compared with 96,000 in September of last year. In
August 2004, there were five Iraqi army battalions in the fight; now
more than 120 Iraqi army and police battalions are in the fight. Of
these battalions, more than 80 are fighting side-by-side with Coalition
forces and more than 40 others are taking the lead in the fight. More
battalions are being recruited, trained, and fielded. In July 2004 there
were no operational Iraqi brigade or division headquarters; now there
are seven division and more than 30 brigade headquarters in the Iraqi
army. In June 2004, there were no Iraqi combat support or service
support battalions; now there are a half dozen operational battalions
supporting fielded Iraqi units.
- Iraqi forces are growing in capability. In
June 2004, no Iraqi Security Force unit controlled territory. The
Coalition provided most of the security in Iraq. Today, much of Baghdad
province is under the control of Iraqi forces, the cities of Najaf and
Karbala are controlled by Iraqi forces, and other Iraqi battalions and
brigades control hundreds of square miles of territory in other Iraqi
provinces. A year ago, the Iraqi Air Force had no aircraft; today its
three operational squadrons provide airlift and reconnaissance support
and Iraqi pilots are training on newly arrived helicopters. A year ago
during the operation to liberate Fallujah, five Iraqi battalions took
part in the fight. For the most part, they fell in behind Coalition
forces to help control territory already seized by Coalition units. No
Iraqi units controlled their own battle space. In September 2005, during
Operation Restoring Rights in Tal Afar, eleven Iraqi battalions
participated, controlling their own battle space, and outnumbering
Coalition forces for the first time in a major offensive operation. Over
the last six months, the number of patrols being conducted independently
by Iraqi forces has doubled, bringing the overall percentage to nearly a
quarter of all patrols in theater.
- Iraqis are committed to building up their security
establishment. Despite repeated and brutal attacks against
Iraqi Security Forces, volunteers continue to outpace an already
substantial demand. In the past several months alone, nearly 5,000
recruits have joined from Sunni areas. In the recently cleared Tal Afar,
more than 200 local volunteers have begun police training before
returning to help protect their city. In Anbar, Sunnis have lined up to
join the Iraqi army and police, planning to return to their home
province and help protect it from terrorists.
- Iraqis are taking on specialized missions central to
overall success. Four Strategic Infrastructure Battalions,
with more than 3,000 personnel, have completed training and will soon
assume the specific mission of guarding vital infrastructure nodes from
terrorist attack. A Special Police Unit highly trained for hostage
rescue has almost 200 operators and is conducting operations almost
every week in Baghdad and Mosul. In the past several months, hundreds of
Iraqi soldiers have undergone intensive special operations training and
are now in the fight, hunting, killing, and capturing the most-wanted
terrorist leaders.
- Iraq is building an officer corps that will be loyal to
the Iraqi government, not a particular group or tribe. The
Iraqi army now has three officer academies training the next generation
of junior officers for its army. In September, NATO inaugurated a new
military staff college in Baghdad that will eventually train more than
1,000 senior Iraqi officers each year. Today, however, the vast majority
of Iraqi police and army recruits are being taught by Iraqi instructors.
By training the trainers, we are creating an institutional capability
that will allow the Iraqi forces to continue to develop and grow long
after Coalition forces have left Iraq.
CONTINUED CHALLENGES IN THE SECURITY SPHERE
- Even with this progress, we and our Iraqi partners continue to face
multiple challenges in the security sphere, including:
- Countering the intimidation and brutality of enemies whose tactics are
not constrained by law or moral norms;
- Building representative Iraqi security forces and institutions while
guarding against infiltration by elements whose first loyalties are to
persons or institutions other than the Iraqi government;
- Neutralizing the actions of countries like Syria and Iran, which provide
comfort and/or support to terrorists and the enemies of democracy in Iraq;
- Refining our understanding of the constantly changing nature of, and
relationships between, terrorist groups, other enemy elements, and their
networks;
- Addressing the militias and armed groups that are outside the formal
security sector and central government command;
- Ensuring that the security ministries -- as well as the fighting forces
-- have the capacity to sustain Iraq's new army;
- Integrating political, economic, and security tools -- and synchronizing
them with Iraqi government efforts -- to provide the best post-conflict
operations possible.
"My aim is 100 percent clear: all the terrorists living here, they go
now. Saddam . . . it's finished. He's broken. Now is the new Iraq."
-- Gen. Muhammad al-Sumraa
Iraq 303rd Battalion
Haifa Street, Baghdad
August 14, 2005
THE ECONOMIC TRACK IN DETAIL
Strategic Summary: Restore, Reform, Build
- The economic track is based on six core assumptions:
- First, Iraq has the potential to be not just
viable, but prosperous and self-sustaining.
- Second, a free and prosperous Iraq is in the
economic interest of everybody, including Iraq's neighbors and the
greater Middle East. A flourishing Iraq can spur economic activity and
reform in one of the world's most vital regions.
- Third, increased economic opportunity in Iraq and a
growing economy will give larger numbers of Iraqis an economic stake in
a peaceful country, and drain the influence of radicals and
rejectionists who recruit the unemployed and thrive on resentment.
- Fourth, economic change in Iraq will be steady but
gradual given a generation of neglect, corrosive misrule, and central
planning that stifled entrepreneurship and initiative.
- Fifth, Iraq can be a reliable and contributing
partner in the international economic community, demonstrating the
fruits of good governance and transparency.
- Sixth, Iraq will need financial support from the
region and international community as its economy transitions from being
guided by command principles and hampered by poor infrastructure to a
more self-sustaining posture.
<strong align="center">STRATEGIC LOGIC BEHIND THE ECONOMIC
TRACK
- Our efforts have focused on helping Iraq restore its neglected
infrastructure so it can provide essential services to the population while
encouraging economic reforms, greater transparency, and accountability in
the economic realm. The international community has been instrumental in
these efforts, but there is room for the international community to do more.
Foreign direct investment, over time, will play an increasing role in
fueling Iraq's economic growth.
- How will these efforts help the Iraqis -- with Coalition support --
defeat the enemy and achieve our larger goals?
- The rebuilding of Iraq's infrastructure and the provision of
essential services will increase the confidence of Iraqis
in their government and help convince them that the government is
offering them a brighter future. People will then be more likely to
cooperate with the government, and provide intelligence against the
enemy, creating a less hospitable environment for the terrorists and
insurgents.
- Efforts in the reconstruction realm have significant
implications in the security realm when they focus on
rebuilding post-conflict cities and towns. Compensation for
civilians hurt by counterterrorism operations and the restoration of
some economic vibrancy to areas formerly under terrorist control can
help ease resentment and win over an otherwise suspicious
population.
- Economic growth and reform of Saddam-era laws and regulations
will be critical to ensuring that Iraq can support and
maintain the new security institutions that the country is
developing, attract new investment to Iraq, and become a full,
integrated member of the international economic community.
- Economic growth and market reform -- and the promotion of Iraq's
private sector -- are necessary to expand job opportunities for the
youthful Iraqi population and decrease unemployment that makes some
Iraqis more vulnerable to terrorist or insurgent recruiting.
PROGRESS ON THE ECONOMIC TRACK
- Our restore, reform, build, strategy is
achieving results:
- Oil production increased from an average of 1.58 million barrels per
day in 2003, to an average of 2.25 million barrels per day in 2004. Iraq
presently is producing on average 2.1 million barrels per day, a slight
decrease due to terrorist attacks on infrastructure, dilapidated and
insufficient infrastructure, and poor maintenance practices. We are
helping the Iraqis address each challenge so the country can have a
dependable income stream.
- Iraq's nominal GDP recovered from its nadir of $13.6 billion in 2003
to $25.5 billion in 2004, led primarily by the recovery of the oil
sector. According to the International Monetary Fund, GDP is expected to
grow in real terms by 3.7 percent in 2005 and nearly 17 percent in 2006.
- Iraq's exchange rate has been stable since the introduction of its
new currency in 2004 and remains so at approximately 1,475 Iraqi Dinar/$1.
A stable currency has allowed the Central Bank of Iraq to better manage
inflationary pressures.
- According to the IMF, per capita GDP, an important measure of
poverty, rebounded to $942 in 2004 (after dropping to $518 in 2003), and
is expected to continue to increase to over $1,000 in 2005.
- Since April 2003, Iraq has registered more than 30,000 new
businesses, and its stock market (established in April 2004) currently
lists nearly 90 companies with an average daily trading volume over $100
million (from January to May 2005), up from an average of $86 million in
2004.
- Iraq is rejoining the international financial community: it is on
the road to WTO accession, has completed its first IMF economic health
report card in 25 years, and secured an agreement that could lead to as
much as 80 percent reduction from the Paris Club for Saddam-era debt.
- At the October 2003 Madrid International Donors Conference, donors
other than the United States pledged over $13 billion in assistance for
the reconstruction of Iraq, including $8 billion from foreign
governments and $5.5 billion in lending from the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund, to be disbursed from 2004 through 2007.
- Iraqi business leaders are decidedly optimistic about the growth of
the economy as well as the growth of their own businesses.
- According to a September poll by Zogby International for the
Center for International Private Enterprise, 77 percent
of Iraqi businesses anticipate growth in the national economy over
the next two years and 69 percent of
respondents describe themselves as being "optimistic"
about Iraq's economic future.
- Today in Iraq there are more than 3 million cell phone subscribers.
In 2003 there were virtually none.
CONTINUED CHALLENGES IN THE ECONOMIC SPHERE
- Even with this progress, Iraq continues to face multiple challenges in
the economic sphere, including:
- Facilitating investment in Iraq's oil sector to increase production
from the current 2.1 million barrels per day to more than 5 million per
day;
- Overcoming decades of Saddam's neglect of Iraq's basic
infrastructure;
- Preventing, repairing, and overcoming terrorist and insurgent
attacks against vital infrastructure, especially electricity and oil
related nodes;
- Dealing with an increased demand for electricity;
- The liberalization of border trade and increased salaries of
Iraqis, has led to increased demand for electrical goods since 2003,
which has driven up demand for electricity. At the same time,
insurgent attacks and dilapidated infrastructure have complicated
efforts to bring more electricity on-line. The Iraqis, with our
assistance,are working to ease electricity constraints by providing
greater security to transmission lines, investing in new generation
capacity, and evaluating the prospects of using natural gas --as
opposed to inefficient fuels -- to keep generators running.
- Creating a payment system and a banking infrastructure that are
responsive to the needs of the domestic and international communities,
and that allow transactions involving possible money laundering,
terrorist financing and other financial crimes to be detected;
- Balancing the need for economic reform -- particularly of bloated
fuel and food subsidies -- with political realities;
- Building the administrative and technical capacities of Iraqi
ministries;
- Ensuring as much reconstruction assistance as possible flows to
Iraqi entities (ministries and businesses);
- Encouraging local and regional capacity building after decades of a
highly centralized government, so that reconstruction and essential
services can be more evenly distributed throughout Iraq;
- Facilitating progress toward a market-oriented economy by reforming
commercial laws and other bureaucratic obstacles to attract investment
and private sector involvement;
- Encouraging many in the region and the international community to
disburse their pledges more quickly and contribute even greater
resources to Iraq's reconstruction.
ORGANIZATION FOR VICTORY
The 8 Strategic Pillars
- Our strategy for victory along the political, security, and economic
tracks incorporates every aspect of American power, with
assistance from agencies throughout the federal government, and the
involvement of the United Nations, other international organizations,
Coalition countries, and other supportive countries and regional states.
It is predicated on the belief that we must marshal these resources to help
Iraqis overcome the challenges remaining before them.
- Our strategy is comprehensive, and relies on a
sustained and courageous effort by hundreds of thousands of Americans
and Coalition partners, military and civilian, in the security,
political, economic, and diplomatic realms -- in addition to the
millions of Iraqis they work with everyday.
- To organize these efforts, we have broken down our
political/security/economic strategy into eight pillars
or strategic objectives:
- Defeat the Terrorists and Neutralize the Insurgency
- Transition Iraq to Security Self-Reliance
- Help Iraqis Form a National Compact for Democratic Government
- Help Iraq Build Government Capacity and Provide Essential
Services
- Help Iraq Strengthen its Economy
- Help Iraq Strengthen the Rule of Law and Promote Civil Rights
- Increase International Support for Iraq
- Strengthen Public Understanding of Coalition Efforts and Public
Isolation of the Insurgents
- Each Strategic Pillar contains at least five independent lines of action
and scores of sub-actions, with specific objectives being met by military
and civilian volunteers, Iraqis, and our international partners.
- Underlying each line of action is a series of missions and tasks
assigned to military and civilian units in Iraq. These missions and tasks
are largely classified, but we seek to characterize them in the unclassified
appendix that follows. By understanding our organization, Americans can
better understand our strategy and the steps we are taking to achieve
long-term victory in Iraq.
- Each pillar has a corresponding interagency working group -- where
professionals from the National Security Council, State Department, Defense
Department, Treasury Department, Commerce Department, Homeland Security, and
other agencies coordinate policy, review and assess the progress that is
being made, develop new proposals for action whenever necessary, and oversee
the implementation of existing policies.
- Weekly strategy sessions at senior levels of the United States
Government ensure that Iraq remains a top priority for all relevant agencies
with actions along all the eight pillars of activity integrated and
calibrated to changed circumstances whenever necessary.
- This is the essence of a conditions-based strategy: constantly reviewing
conditions as they evolve and changing and redirecting tactics as needed to
keep a trajectory towards long-term success.
- Our team in Baghdad -- led by Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and General
George Casey -- works to implement policy on the ground and lay the
foundation for long-term success.
- The following appendix outlines each Pillar to provide a sense of how
our mission in Iraq is organized. As these pages demonstrate, there is hard
work to do, but the stakes could not be higher, and we are organized for
victory to an extent not seen since the end of the Cold War.
"There's always a temptation, in the middle of a long struggle, to seek
the quiet life, to escape the duties and problems of the world, and to hope the
enemy grows weary of fanaticism and tired of murder. This would be a pleasant
world, but it's not the world we live in. The enemy is never tired, never sated,
never content with yesterday's brutality. This enemy considers every retreat of
the civilized world as an invitation to greater violence. In Iraq, there is no
peace without victory. We will keep our nerve, and we will win that victory."
-- President George W. Bush
October 6, 2005
Index |
Summary |
Part I |
Part II |
8 Pillars
|
Pocket Lint
We don't have a budget crisis. We have a spending crisis.
-- Jonathan Hill, Citizens for a Sound Economy
In the Cuff
Categories Menu
Freshly Pressed
|