MEMORANDUM FOR: The President
FROM: Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity
SUBJECT: Recommendation: Try a Circle of "Wise
Women"
By way of re-introduction, we begin with a brief reminder of the analyses
we provided you before the attack on Iraq. On the afternoon of February 5, 2003,
following Colin Powell’s speech before the UN Security Council that morning, we
sent you our critique of his attempt to make the case for war. (You may recall
that we gave him an “A” for assembling and listing the charges against Iraq and
a “C-“ for providing context and perspective.) Unlike Powell, we made no claim
that our analysis was “irrefutable/undeniable.” We did point out, though, that
what he said fell far short of justification for war. We closed with these words:
“We are convinced that you would be well served if you widened the discussion
beyond the circle of those advisers clearly bent on a war for which we see no
compelling reason and from which we believe the unintended consequences are likely
to be catastrophic.”
To jog your memory further, the thrust of our next
two pre-war memoranda can be gleaned from their titles: “Cooking Intelligence
for War” (March 12) and “Forgery, Hyperbole, Half-Truth: A Problem” (March 18).
When the war started, we reasoned at first that you might had been oblivious to
our cautions. However, last spring’s disclosures in the “Downing Street Memo”
containing the official minutes of Tony Blair’s briefing on July 23, 2002—and
the particularly the bald acknowledgement that “the intelligence and facts were
being fixed around the policy” of war on Iraq—show that the White House was well
aware of how the intelligence was being cooked. We write you now in the hope that
the sour results of the recipe—the current bedlam in Iraq—will incline you to
seek and ponder wider opinion this time around.
A Still Narrower Circle
With the departure of Colin Powell, your circle of advisers has shrunk
rather than widened. The amateur architects of the Iraq war, Vice President Dick
Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, seem still to have your ear. At
a similar stage of the Vietnam War, President Lyndon Johnson woke up to the fact
that he had been poorly served by his principal advisers and quickly appointed
an informal group of “wise men” to provide fresh insight and advice. It turned
out to be one of the smartest things Johnson did. He was brought to realize that
the US could not prevail in Vietnam; that he was finished politically; and that
the US needed to move to negotiations with the Vietnamese "insurgents."
It
is clear to those of us who witnessed at first hand the gross miscalculations
on Vietnam that a similar juncture has now been reached on Iraq. We are astonished
at the advice you have been getting--the vice president's recent assurance that
the Iraqi resistance is "in its last throes," for example. (Shades of his assurances
that US forces would be welcomed as "liberators" in Iraq.) And Secretary Rumsfeld's
unreassuring reminders that "some things are unknowable" and the familiar bromide
that "time will tell" are wearing thin. By now it is probably becoming clear to
you that you need outside counsel.
The good news is that some help is on its
way. Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey has taken the initiative to schedule a hearing
on September 15, where knowledgeable specialists on various aspects of the situation
in Iraq will present their views. Unfortunately, it appears that this opportunity
to learn will fall short of the extremely informative bipartisan hearings led
by Sen. William Fullbright on Vietnam. The refusal thus far of the House Republican
leadership to make a suitable conference room available suggests that the Woolsey
hearing, like the one led by Congressman John Conyers on June 16, will lack the
kind of bipartisan support so necessary if one is to deal sensibly with the Iraq
problem.
Meanwhile, we respectfully suggest that you could profit from the
insights of the informal group of “wise women” right there in Crawford. You could
hardly do better than to ride your bike down to Camp Casey. There you will find
Gold Star mothers, Iraq (and Vietnam) war veterans, and others eager to share
reality-based perspectives of the kind you are unlikely to hear from your small
circle of yes-men and the yes-woman in Washington, none of whom have had direct
experience of war. As you know, Cindy Sheehan has been waiting to get on your
calendar. She is now back in Crawford and has resumed her Lazarus-at-the-Gate
vigil in front of your ranch. We strongly suggest that you take time out from
your vacation to meet with her and the other Gold Star mothers when you get back
to Crawford later this week. This would be a useful way for you to acquire insight
into the many shades of gray between the blacks and whites of Iraq, and to become
more sensitized to the indignities that so often confound and infuriate the mothers,
fathers, wives, and other relatives of soldiers killed and wounded there.
Names and Faces
Here are the names, ages, and hometowns of the eight
soldiers, including Casey Sheehan, killed in the ambush in Sadr City, Baghdad
on April 4, 2004:
Specialist Robert R. Arsiaga, 25, San Antonio, Texas
Specialist
Ahmed A. Cason, 24, McCalla, Alabama
Sergeant Yihjyh L. Chen, 31, Saipan,
Marianas
Specialist Israel Garza, 25, Lubbock, Texas
Specialist Stephen
D. Hiller, 25, Opelika, Alabama
Corporal Forest J. Jostes, 22, Albion, Illinois
Sergeant Michael W. Mitchell, 25, Porterville, California
Specialist Casey
A. Sheehan, 24, Vacaville, California
Mike Mitchell’s father, Bill, has been
camped out for two weeks with Cindy Sheehan and others a short bike ride from
your place. They have a lot of questions—big and small. You are aware of the big
ones: In what sense were the deaths of Casey, Mike Mitchell and the others “worth
it?” In what sense is the continued occupation of Iraq a “noble cause?” No doubt
you have been given talking points on those. But the time has passed for sound
bites and rhetoric. We are suggesting something much more real—and private.
Questions
There are less ambitious—one might call them more tactical—questions
that are also accompanied by a lot of pain and frustration. Those eight fine soldiers
were killed by forces loyal to the fiercely anti-American Muqtada al-Sadr, the
young Shia cleric with a militant following, particularly in Baghdad’s impoverished
suburbs. The ambush was part of a violent uprising resulting from US Ambassador
Paul Bremer’s decision to close down Al Hawza, Al-Sadr’s newspaper, on March 28,
2004.
And not only that. A senior aide of al-Sadr was arrested by US forces
on April 3. The following day al-Sadr ordered his followers to “terrorize” occupation
forces and this sparked the deadly street battles, including the ambush. Also
on April 4, Bremer branded al-Sadr an “outlaw” and coalition spokesman Dan Senior
said coalition forces planned to arrest him as well. In sum, before one can begin
to understand the grief of Cindy, Bill, and the relatives of the other six soldiers
killed, you need to know—as they do— what else was going on April 4, 2004.
You may wish to come prepared to answer specific questions like the following:
1. Closing down newspapers and arresting key opposition figures seem a strange
way to foster democracy. Please explain. And how could Ambassador Bremer possibly
have thought that al-Sadr would simply acquiesce?
2. Muqtada al-Sadr seems
to have landed on his feet. At this point, he and other Shiite clerics appear
on the verge of imposing an Islamic state with Shariah law and a very close relationship
with Iran. With this kind of prospect, can you feel the frustration of Gold Star
mothers when the extremist ultimately responsible for their sons’ deaths assumes
a leadership role in the new Iraq? Can you understand their strong wish to prevent
the sacrifice of still more of our children for such dubious purpose?
Perhaps
you will have good answers to these and other such questions. Good answers or
no, we believe a quiet, respectful session with the wise women and perhaps others
at your doorstep would give you valuable new insights into the ironic conundrums
and human dimensions of the war in Iraq.
A member of our Steering Committee,
Ann Wright, has been on site at Camp Casey from the outset and would be happy
to facilitate such a session. A veteran Army colonel (and also a senior Foreign
Service officer until she resigned in protest over the attack on Iraq), Ann has
been keeping Camps Casey I and II running in a good-neighborly, orderly way. She
is well known to your Secret Service agents, who can lead you to her. We strongly
urge you not to miss this opportunity.
/s/
Gene Betit, Arlington, Virginia
Sibel Edmonds, Alexandria, Virginia
Larry Johnson, Bethesda, Maryland
David MacMichael, Linden, Virginia
Ray McGovern, Arlington, Virginia
Coleen
Rowley, Apple Valley, Minnesota
Ann Wright, Honolulu, Hawaii
Steering Group
Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
###