Rumsfeld’s personal contempt for many of the senior
generals and admirals who were promoted to top jobs during the
Clinton Administration is widely known. He was especially
critical of the Army, with its insistence on maintaining costly
mechanized divisions. In his off-the-cuff memoranda, or
“snowflakes,” as they’re called in the
Pentagon, he chafed about generals having “the
slows”—a reference to Lincoln’s
characterization of General George McClellan. “In those
conditions—an atmosphere of derision and
challenge—the senior officers do not offer their best
advice,” a high-ranking general who served for more than a
year under Rumsfeld said. One witness to a meeting recalled
Rumsfeld confronting General Eric Shinseki, the Army Chief of
Staff, in front of many junior officers. “He was looking at
the Chief and waving his hand,” the witness said,
“saying, ‘Are you getting this yet? Are you getting
this yet?’”
Gradually, Rumsfeld succeeded in replacing those officers in
senior Joint Staff positions who challenged his view. “All
the Joint Staff people now are handpicked, and churn out products
to make the Secretary of Defense happy,” the planner said.
“They don’t make military judgments—they just
respond to his snowflakes.”
In the months leading up to the war, a split developed inside the
military, with the planners and their immediate superiors warning
that the war plan was dangerously thin on troops and mat?riel,
and the top generals—including General Tommy Franks, the
head of the U.S. Central Command, and Air Force General Richard
Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff—supporting
Rumsfeld. After Turkey’s parliament astonished the war
planners in early March by denying the United States permission
to land the 4th Infantry Division in Turkey, Franks initially
argued that the war ought to be delayed until the troops could be
brought in by another route, a former intelligence official said.
“Rummy overruled him.”
Many of the present and former officials I spoke to were critical
of Franks for his perceived failure to stand up to his civilian
superiors. A former senator told me that Franks was widely seen
as a commander who “will do what he’s told.” A
former intelligence official asked, “Why didn’t he go
to the President?” A Pentagon official recalled that one
senior general used to prepare his deputies for meetings with
Rumsfeld by saying, “When you go in to talk to him,
you’ve got to be prepared to lay your stars on the table
and walk out. Otherwise, he’ll walk over you.”
In early February, according to a senior Pentagon official,
Rumsfeld appeared at the Army Commanders’ Conference, a
biannual business and social gathering of all the four-star
generals. Rumsfeld was invited to join the generals for dinner
and make a speech. All went well, the official told me, until
Rumsfeld, during a question-and-answer session, was asked about
his personal involvement in the deployment of combat units, in
some cases with only five or six days’ notice. To the
astonishment and anger of the generals, Rumsfeld denied
responsibility. “He said, ‘I wasn’t
involved,’” the official said. “‘It was
the Joint Staff.’”
“We thought it would be fence-mending, but it was a
disaster,” the official said of the dinner.
“Everybody knew he was looking at these deployment orders.
And for him to blame it on the Joint Staff—” The
official hesitated a moment, and then said, “It’s all
about Rummy and the truth.”
According to a dozen or so military men I spoke to, Rumsfeld
simply failed to anticipate the consequences of protracted
warfare. He put Army and Marine units in the field with few
reserves and an insufficient number of tanks and other armored
vehicles. (The military men say that the vehicles that they do
have have been pushed too far and are malfunctioning.) Supply
lines—inevitably, they say—have become overextended
and vulnerable to attack, creating shortages of fuel, water, and
ammunition. Pentagon officers spoke contemptuously of the
Administration’s optimistic press briefings.
“It’s a stalemate now,” the former intelligence
official told me. “It’s going to remain one only if
we can maintain our supply lines. The carriers are going to run
out of jdams”—the satellite-guided bombs that have
been striking targets in Baghdad and elsewhere with extraordinary
accuracy. Much of the supply of Tomahawk guided missiles has been
expended. “The Marines are worried as hell,” the
former intelligence official went on. “They’re all
committed, with no reserves, and they’ve never run the
lavs”—light armored vehicles—“as long and
as hard” as they have in Iraq. There are serious
maintenance problems as well. “The only hope is that they
can hold out until reinforcements come.”
The 4th Infantry Division—the Army’s most modern
mechanized division—whose equipment spent weeks waiting in
the Mediterranean before being diverted to the overtaxed American
port in Kuwait, is not expected to be operational until the end
of April. The 1st Cavalry Division, in Texas, is ready to ship
out, the planner said, but by sea it will take twenty-three days
to reach Kuwait. “All we have now is front-line
positions,” the former intelligence official told me.
“Everything else is missing.”
Last week, plans for an assault on Baghdad had stalled, and the
six Republican Guard divisions expected to provide the main Iraqi
defense had yet to have a significant engagement with American or
British soldiers. The shortages forced Central Command to
“run around looking for supplies,” the former
intelligence official said. The immediate goal, he added, was for
the Army and Marine forces “to hold tight and hope that the
Republican Guard divisions get chewed up” by bombing. The
planner agreed, saying, “The only way out now is back, and
to hope for some kind of a miracle—that the Republican
Guards commit themselves,” and thus become vulnerable to
American air strikes.
“Hope,” a retired four-star general subsequently told
me, “is not a course of action.” Last Thursday, the
Army’s senior ground commander, Lieutenant General William
S. Wallace, said to reporters, “The enemy we’re
fighting is different from the one we war-gamed against.”
(One senior Administration official commented to me, speaking of
the Iraqis, “They’re not scared. Ain’t it
something? They’re not scared.”) At a press
conference the next day, Rumsfeld and Myers were asked about
Wallace’s comments, and defended the war plan—Myers
called it “brilliant” and “on track.”
They pointed out that the war was only a little more than a week
old.
Scott Ritter, the former marine and United Nations weapons
inspector, who has warned for months that the American
“shock and awe” strategy would not work, noted that
much of the bombing has had little effect or has been
counterproductive. For example, the bombing of Saddam’s
palaces has freed up a brigade of special guards who had been
assigned to protect them, and who have now been sent home to
await further deployment. “Every one of their
homes—and they are scattered throughout Baghdad—is
stacked with ammunition and supplies,” Ritter told me.
“This is tragic,” one senior planner said bitterly.
“American lives are being lost.” The former
intelligence official told me, “They all said, ‘We
can do it with air power.’ They believed their own
propaganda.” The high-ranking former general described
Rumsfeld’s approach to the Joint Staff war planning as
“McNamara-like intimidation by intervention of a small
cell”—a reference to Secretary of Defense Robert S.
McNamara and his aides, who were known for their challenges to
the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Vietnam War. The former
high-ranking general compared the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the
Stepford wives. “They’ve abrogated their
responsibility.”
Perhaps the biggest disappointment of last week was the
failure of the Shiite factions in southern Iraq to support the
American and British invasion. Various branches of the Al Dawa
faction, which operate underground, have been carrying out acts
of terrorism against the Iraqi regime since the
nineteen-eighties. But Al Dawa has also been hostile to American
interests. Some in American intelligence have implicated the
group in the 1983 bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut, which
cost the lives of two hundred and forty-one marines.
Nevertheless, in the months before the war the Bush
Administration courted Al Dawa by including it among the
opposition groups that would control postwar Iraq. “Dawa is
one group that could kill Saddam,” a former American
intelligence official told me. “They hate Saddam because he
suppressed the Shiites. They exist to kill Saddam.” He said
that their apparent decision to stand with the Iraqi regime now
was a “disaster” for us. “They’re like
hard-core Vietcong.”
There were reports last week that Iraqi exiles, including fervent
Shiites, were crossing into Iraq by car and bus from Jordan and
Syria to get into the fight on the side of the Iraqi government.
Robert Baer, a former C.I.A. Middle East operative, told me in a
telephone call from Jordan, “Everybody wants to fight. The
whole nation of Iraq is fighting to defend Iraq. Not Saddam.
They’ve been given the high sign, and we are courting
disaster. If we take fifty or sixty casualties a day and they die
by the thousands, they’re still winning. It’s a
jihad, and it’s a good thing to die. This is no longer a
secular war.” There were press reports of mujahideen
arriving from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Algeria for
“martyrdom operations.”
There had been an expectation before the war that Iran,
Iraq’s old enemy, would side with the United States in this
fight. One Iraqi opposition group, the Iraqi National Congress,
led by Ahmed Chalabi, has been in regular contact with the
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or sciri, an
umbrella organization for Shiite groups who oppose Saddam. The
organization is based in Iran and has close ties to Iranian
intelligence. The Chalabi group set up an office last year in
Tehran, with the approval of Chalabi’s supporters in the
Pentagon, who include Rumsfeld, his deputies Wolfowitz and Feith,
and Richard Perle, the former chairman of the Defense Policy
Board. Chalabi has repeatedly predicted that the Tehran
government would provide support, including men and arms, if an
American invasion of Iraq took place.
Last week, however, this seemed unlikely. In a press conference
on Friday, Rumsfeld warned Iranian militants against interfering
with American forces and accused Syria of sending military
equipment to the Iraqis. A Middle East businessman who has
long-standing ties in Jordan and Syria—and whose
information I have always found reliable—told me that the
religious government in Tehran “is now backing Iraq in the
war. There isn’t any Arab fighting group on the ground in
Iraq who is with the United States,” he said.
There is also evidence that Turkey has been playing both sides.
Turkey and Syria, who traditionally have not had close relations,
recently agreed to strengthen their ties, the businessman told
me, and early this year Syria sent Major General Ghazi Kanaan,
its longtime strongman and power broker in Lebanon, to Turkey.
The two nations have begun to share intelligence and to meet,
along with Iranian officials, to discuss border issues, in case
an independent Kurdistan emerges from the Iraq war. A former U.S.
intelligence officer put it this way: “The Syrians are
coordinating with the Turks to screw us in the north—to
cause us problems.” He added, “Syria and the Iranians
agreed that they could not let an American occupation of Iraq
stand.”