You can find this same thinking no less readily available in another counting exercise under way in Washington…
Counting to Five, to Ten, to Fifty
Right now, leading Democrats, as well as Republicans, are focused on
counting to both five and ten, which turn out to be the same thing. In
a recent debate among the Democratic candidates for the presidency, for
instance, the top three (by media and polling agreement), Hillary
Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards
refused to commit to having all American troops out of Iraq
by 2013, the end of a first term in office — five years from now, and 10 years from the March 2003 launching of the invasion.
Like much else of recent vintage, this 10-year count may have started
with our surge commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, who, for some
time, has been
telling
just about anyone willing to listen that counter-insurgency operations
in Iraq could take "up to a decade." ("In fact," he told Fox News in
June, "typically, I think historically, counter-insurgency operations
have gone at least nine or 10 years.") Now, it seems, his
to-the-horizon-and-beyond Iraqi timetable has largely been subsumed
into an inside-the-Beltway consensus that no one — not in this
administration or the next, not a new president or a new Congress —
will end our involvement in Iraq in the foreseeable future; that, in
fact, we
must stay in Iraq and that, the worse it gets, the
more that becomes true — if only to protect the Iraqis (and our
interests in the Middle East) from even worse.
Conservative
New York Times columnist David Brooks put it
this way on the
NewsHour with Jim Lehrer:
"[The Democrats in Congress are] not going to cut off funding, and
we've seen and we saw in the debate this week, there are going to be
probably U.S. troops in Iraq there 10 years, regardless who's elected.
So they're not going to win on this." Liberal warhawk George Packer in
the New Yorker
recently wrote a long article, "Planning for Defeat," laying out many
of the reasons why Iraq remains a disaster area and discussing various
methods of withdrawal before plunking for a policy summed up in the
suggestion of an anonymous Bush administration official, "Declare
defeat and stay in." Packer concluded: "Whenever this country decides
that the bloody experience in Iraq requires the departure of American
troops, complete disengagement will be neither desirable nor possible.
We might want to be rid of Iraq, but Iraq won't let it happen."
Retired Brigadier General Kevin Ryan, representing the military punditocracy,
offered
the following: "I don't see us getting out of Iraq for a decade." In
fact, increasingly few in official Washington do. (An exception is
presidential candidate
Bill Richardson,
who launched a web video this week from a total withdrawal position
that began: "George Bush says the surge is working. Gen. Petraeus says
it will take more time. Republican presidential candidates say stay as
long as it takes. No surprises there. But, you might be surprised to
learn that Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards would all
leave tens of thousands of troops in Iraq…") Iraq is, of course,
acknowledged to be the number-one issue in the upcoming presidential
campaign; the ever growing unhappiness of Americans with our presence
in that country is considered a fact of political life; and yet it's
becoming ever harder to imagine just what the future Iraq debate among
presidential candidates will actually be about, if everyone agrees that
we have at least five years to go with no end in sight.
And
let's remember that behind the five and ten counts lurks a count to 50
and beyond; the number of years, that is, that American troops have
been garrisoned in South Korea since the Korean War ended in stalemate
in 1953. Visitors to the White House have long reported that President
Bush was
intrigued with the "Korea model." As David Sanger of the
New York Times'
wrote recently: "Many times over the past six months, he has told
visitors to the White House that he needs to get to the Korea model — a
politically sustainable U.S. deployment to keep the lid on the Middle
East." (Keep in mind, however, that, when the Bush administration
rumbled into Baghdad on their tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles in
April 2003, it was the
Korea model they had in mind — though they weren't calling it that at the time.)
This is the model that Secretary of Defense Robert Gates also seems to have
put
his money on — a drawn-down American force garrisoned in giant,
semi-permanent bases in a "stabilized" Iraq for eons to come. The
Congressional Budget Office has
already crunched numbers on what such a model would likely cost.
Behind all these counting exercises lies the belief that wherever we
land and whatever we do, we are, in the end, the anointed bringers of
something called "stability" and if we have to count to 50, 500,
50,000, or 500,000 and do it in the currency of corpses, sooner or
later it will be so.
Counting Bodies
Everyone remembers when the Vietnam-era body count was banished from
the Global War on Terror. Tommy Franks, the general who led American
forces into Afghanistan (and later Iraq),
bluntly stated:
"We don't do body counts." And then, jumping ahead a few years, there
was the President plaintively blurting out his pain to a coffee klatch
of empathetic
conservative journalists
in October 2006: "We don't get to say that — a thousand of the enemy
killed, or whatever the number was. It's happening. You just don't know
it…. We have made a conscious effort not to be a body-count team."
Well, tell that to the troops on the ground. There, it's evidently been
déjà vu all over again for a while.
The recent murder trial of an American sniper from an elite sniper
scout platoon operating in Iskandariya, a Sunni area in the "Triangle
of Death" south of Baghdad, has been filled with revelations. Among
them, that the Pentagon has a program to put
"bait"
out like "detonation cords, plastic explosives and ammunition" to draw
unwary insurgents into sniper scopes; this, in a land with perhaps 50%
unemployment, where anything salvageable will be scavenged by
civilians. ("In a country that is awash in armaments and magazines and
implements of war, if every time somebody picked up something that was
potentially useful as a weapon, you might as well ask every Iraqi to
walk around with a target on his back," comments Eugene Fidell of the
National Institute of Military Justice.) As it turns out, the snipers
seem to have misunderstood the use of these "bait" items — or to have
understood all too well their real use — and instead placed them on
unarmed Iraqis they had already killed in order to create instant
"insurgent" bodies appropriate for the body count that wasn't supposed
to be.
As Private David C. Petta, told the court, according to the
Washington Post,
"he believed the classified items were for dropping on people the unit
had killed, ‘to enforce if we killed somebody that we knew was a bad
guy but we didn't have the evidence to show for it.'" (The weaponizing
of the dead was, by the way, a
commonplace of the Vietnam War as well.) According to
court testimony,
the specialists from this sniper squad, "described how their teams were
pushed beyond limits by battalion commanders eager to raise their kill
ratio against a ruthless enemy.... During a separate hearing here in
July, Sgt. Anthony G. Murphy said he and other First Battalion snipers
felt 'an underlying tone' of disappointment from field commanders
seeking higher enemy body counts. 'It just kind of felt like, "What are
you guys doing wrong out there?"'")
And little wonder, given what was at stake. This was, of course,
standard operating procedure in Vietnam too — and for the same reasons.
Lieutenant General Julian J. Ewell, for instance, had his own codified
kill ratios of "allied to enemy dead" for his units in Vietnam. These
ranged from 1:50, which qualified as "highly skilled U.S. unit" to
1:10, "historical U.S. average." And woe be to those who were just
average. Units will be "pushed beyond limits" any time "victory" or
"success" or "progress" becomes nothing but a body-counting game, as is
happening again.
Once progress in a frustrating counter-guerrilla war is pegged to those
endlessly toted up corpses, the counting process itself naturally
becomes a crucial measure of success (in lieu of actual success), unit
by unit — which means it also becomes a key measure of performance, and
performance is, of course, the measure of military advancement. So, the
pressure to be that "highly skilled unit" translates into pressure for
more bodies to report as signs of success. Sooner or later, if you just
report actual enemy killed, your stats sheet begins to look lousy —
especially if others are inflating their figures, as they will do. And
then the pressure only builds.
Every bit of this should ring a grim bell or two; but, as
New Yorker journalist Seymour Hersh commented recently in
an interview with the German magazine
Der Spiegel,
from Vietnam to today there's been "no learning curve." "You'd think,"
he said, "that in this country with so many smart people, that we can't
possibly do the same dumb thing again.... [but] everything is tabula
rasa."
Counting Squads
Prepare not to be surprised: In Iraq, the military counted bodies from
the beginning — counted, in fact, everything. They just weren't
releasing the figures back in the days when the Bush administration was
less desperate about Iraq and far more desperate not to appear to be
back in the Vietnam era of endless stats and no victory. But the
"metrics" (as they are called) were always something of an open secret.
In March 2005, for instance, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld told
an
NPR reporter:
"We
have a room here [in the Pentagon], the Iraq Room where we track a
whole series of metrics. Some of them are inputs and some of them are
outputs, results, and obviously the inputs are easier to do and less
important, and the outputs are vastly more important and more difficult
to do. "We track, for example, the numbers of attacks by area. We track
the types of attacks by area…. [W]e track a number of reports of
intimidation, attempts at intimidation or assassination of government
officials, for example. We track the extent to which people are
supplying intelligence to our people so that they can go in and
actually track down and capture or kill insurgents. We try to
desegregate the people we've captured and look at what they are. Are
they foreign fighters, Jihadist types? Are they criminals who were paid
money to go do something like that? Are they former regime elements,
Ba'athists? And we try to keep track of what those numbers are in terms
of detainees and people that are processed in that way.... We probably
look at 50, 60, 70 different types of metrics, and come away with them
with an impression."
And as it happens, though he didn't mention it that day, the military
were also assiduously counting corpses. We know that because last week
they released figures to
USA Today on how many insurgents U.S. forces have supposedly killed since the invasion of Iraq ended:
18,832
since June 2003; 4,882 "militants" so far in 2007 alone. That
represents a leap of 25% in corpse-counting from the previous year.
These previously derided body counts, according to American officials
quoted in
Stars and Stripes, now give the necessary "scale" and "context" to the fight in Iraq.
As the
USA Today
report points out, last year Centcom Commander John Abizaid had
suggested that the forces of the Sunni insurgency numbered in the
10,000-20,000 range. If the released figures are accurate, nearly
25%-50% of that number must have been killed this year. (Who knows how
many were wounded.) Add in suspected Sunni insurgents and terrorists
incarcerated in American prisons in Iraq only in the "surge" months of
2007 —
another 8,000
or so — and it suddenly looks as if something close to the full
insurgency has essentially been turned into a ghost resistance between
January and September of this year.
(Again, Vietnam had its
equivalents. After the nationwide Tet Offensive in February 1968, for
instance, the U.S. military requested more troops from the Johnson
administration. They also claimed that the Vietnamese had lost 45,000
dead. As historian Marilyn Young wrote in her book,
The Vietnam Wars,
"UN Ambassador Arthur Goldberg wanted to know what was enemy troop
strength at the start of Tet. The answer: between 160,000 and 175,000.
And the ratio of killed to wounded? Estimated at three and a half to
one, answered the officer. 'Well, if that's true,' Goldberg calculated
quickly, 'then they have no effective forces left in the field.' This
certainly made additional American forces seem redundant.")
By now, it seems as if everyone on the American side is suddenly
counting in public. In August, the President, for the first time, felt
free to become the leader of a "body-count team" and proudly announced,
in a
televised speech
to the American people, just how many insurgents U.S. forces were
supposedly killing in each surge month (though the figures don't gibe
with the ones released by the military last week): "Our troops have
killed or captured an average of more than 1,500 al Qaeda terrorists
and other extremists every month since January of this year." General
Petraeus, of course,
arrived
in Washington to deliver his "progress report" to Congress with his own
Vietnam-style multicolored charts and graphs to display; and the
military, having sworn not to do body counts, is now releasing figures
daily — often large ones — on kills in
Afghanistan and
Iraq
that regularly make the headlines. And every day, it seems, new
Pentagon databases and squads of number-crunchers are revealed. By now,
it's a genuine carnage party.
Last week, Karen DeYoung of the
Washington Post
reported in far greater depth than we've seen before on the metrics
squads run out of the Pentagon and the U.S. command in Baghdad. In the
process, she found some interesting discrepancies between the findings
of the Pentagon's data analysts and those working for Petraeus —
"Civilian casualty numbers in the Pentagon's latest quarterly report on
Iraq last week, for example, differ significantly from those presented
by the top commander in Iraq…" — and this became the subject of much
on-line analysis at sites like
ThinkProgress.org and
TalkingPointsMemo.com. But perhaps more interesting than these discrepancies was the size of the overall military counting operation.
DeYoung, for instance, interviewed Chief Warrant Officer 3 Dan
Macomber, the "senior all-source intelligence analyst" in charge of a
six-person team whose only task is "to compile [data] and track trends
and analysis for General Petraeus" personally. And that team, in turn,
is but a small part of a larger crew "far from the battlefield" that,
DeYoung reports, includes "
platoons
of soldiers in Iraq and at the Pentagon… assigned to crunch numbers —
sectarian killings, roadside bombs, Iraqi forces trained, weapons
caches discovered and others — in a constant effort to gauge how the
war is going."
Think of that for a moment. "Platoons" of military counters trying to
count their way so high on a pile of Iraqi corpses and captured weapons
that, someday, "progress" and even perhaps a glimmer of "success" might
appear at the end of that dark, dark tunnel. That would be when,
assumedly, the "stability" we represent would finally make its
appearance. What Iraq would be by then is another matter entirely.
Counting to a Million and Beyond
Why would such "platoons" of counters be needed? One answer might be
that the counting runs high indeed. On Monday, there was a revealing
inside-the-fold piece in the
New York Times
on this subject. It was, on the surface, a modest good-news piece from
a distinctly bad-news land. While the central government in Baghdad is
now almost paralyzed, wrote
James Glanz,
its corrupt ministries unable to spend even small percentages of the
oil moneys allotted to them for various reconstruction activities,
local spending in some provinces may be significantly more effective
(or, if you read the piece to the end, it may not). Here was the key
passage:
"The capital budget for the entire country,
including the provinces, was $6 billion in 2006 and $10 billion in
2007. But some national ministries spent as little as 15 percent of
their share last year, citing problems such as a shortage of employees
trained to write contracts, the flight of scientific and engineering
expertise from the country and the danger from militias and the
insurgency."
Think about that: "a shortage of employees
trained to write contracts…"; "the flight of scientific and engineering
expertise from the country…" There's something worth counting, but you
might be doing it for a long, long time. Significant parts of what was
once a large Iraqi professional class have, since the occupation,
become "bus people." They have fled the country in unknown numbers —
though a recent
Oxfam report
indicates that, in Baghdad, some hospitals and universities have lost
up to 80% of their staffs. These are part of a larger exodus of
staggering dimensions. It is now estimated — nobody knows the real
numbers — that there are at least
2.5 million Iraqis who have fled abroad since the Bush administration's invasion ended.
Up to
2.2 million more Iraqis have been dislodged from their homes, largely by sectarian violence, and turned into internal refugees.
And then, of course, there were the Iraqis who couldn't flee — those corpses everyone is now so hot to count, so
eager to measure progress upon. As in June 2006 with the door-to-door study that became the
Lancet
report, which suggested that 600,000 Iraqis might have died violently
since the invasion of 2003, we have another survey of the dead. Again,
it offers startling figures; and, once again, those figures, though
produced by a reputable British survey outfit, ORB or
Opinion Research Business, which has been polling in Iraq since 2005, were
largely ignored in the mainstream media. As Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. wrote in a moving essay at his libertarian website,
LewRockwell.com:
"How
comfy we are all in the United States, as we engage in living-room
debates about the US occupation of Iraq, whether 'we' are bringing them
freedom and whether their freedom is really worth the sacrifice of so
many of our men and women. We talk about whether war aims have really
been achieved, how to exit gracefully, or whether we need a hyper-surge
to finish this whole business once and for all.... But when 'we' cause
the calamity, suddenly there is silence."
A sample of
1,499 Iraqis 18 years old and up were asked: "How many members of your
household, if any, have died as a result of the conflict in Iraq since
2003 (i.e. as a result of violence rather than a natural death such as
old age)? Please note that I mean those who were actually living under
your roof." Nearly one of every two Baghdad households claimed to have
lost a family member and the firm estimated that, overall,
approximately 1.2 million Iraqis may have died violently since the
invasion, which, if true, would put even the Rwandan genocide in the
shade. Other estimates of Iraqi deaths are lower, but still staggering.
And that's just the dead. Not the wounded. Not the mentally damaged or
the shell-shocked or the deranged. Not those thousands in northern Iraq
who are now coming down with
cholera,
thanks to worsening sanitary conditions and the unavailability of
potable water. There — in a country which may have lost 1.2 million
people to violence in four-plus years — is where our leading
presidential candidates, many pundits (liberal as well as
conservative), and significant numbers of Congressional representatives
agree we must remain in some form beyond at least 2013, for reasons of
"stability," lest a "genocide" occur.
If the polls are to be
believed, here in this country only the American people disagree, and
they obviously don't count for much.
So while we hunker into Iraq, the numbers-crunchers will undoubtedly
redouble their efforts for the next "progress report," upcoming in
March 2008, from General Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker. They are
undoubtedly already preparing their bar charts and multi-colored
graphs. Out in the field, the pressure on the troops to provide the
stats that will make those graphs reflect "progress," that will allow
units to achieve "success" and commanders to advance, will only
increase.
The lesson of these last metrics-filled surge months is already clear enough: We count, they don't.
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of the American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory Culture
(University of Massachusetts Press), has just been thoroughly updated
in a newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's
crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.