“The danger is, as
ever with these things, unintended consequences”
Prime Minister Tony
Blair, 2002
Alphen, Netherlands. 7 July. It
is 12 volumes and 2.6 million words in length and took 7 years to prepare. Yesterday
afternoon I spent reading the 150 pages of the Executive Summary of Sir John
Chilcot’s magnus opus The Iraq Enquiry.
The strategic implications of what is a damning report into Tony Blair’s
leadership of Britain at the time of the 2003 Iraq War are profound. Indeed,
given the report’s condemnation (not too strong a word) of the failings of
Britain’s political, intelligence, and military elites Chilcot brings into
question the very utility in any circumstances of Western intervention in the
Middle East and elsewhere. Indeed, Chilcot begs a question that the good knight
himself does not answer; how do western states deal with the very real threats
that do emanate from such places? The
West intervened in Afghanistan and Iraq and stayed; the result was disaster.
The West intervened in Libya but did not stay; the result was disaster. The
West did not really intervene in Syria; the result was disaster.
In recent (and not so recent
history) few such Western efforts to shape the Middle East have achieved their
stated objectives. Indeed, in what is
now a history of ill-considered consequences there is a certain tragic symmetry
in the fact that the July 2016 Chilcot Report was published a century after the
May 1916 Sykes-Picot Accord, which led to the creation of Iraq and so many other
troubled Middle Eastern states.
Chilcot underpins the need for
sound strategic judgement that was lacking at times in the post 911 political
environment. Chilcot reinforces the need for political leaders to understand
what is possible on the ground. For example, there is a marked contrast between
the 1991 Gulf War and the 2003 Gulf War. Whereas the 1991 war was undertaken to
uphold the Middle East state structure, the 2003 war set out to change the very
nature of the Middle Eastern state. Powerful unintended consequences ensued
because powerful unwanted forces were unleashed because powerful people,
especially in Washington, refused to confront powerful realities. Indeed, Iraq was too often more about politics
inside the Beltway, rather than security outside of it.
Chilcot firmly asserts that if such
an intervention is to be launched it must be properly planned, resourced and
forced. None of the West’s post-911 interventions have been properly planned
and all have failed, including Afghanistan. In fact, sound planning was indeed undertaken
for post-‘conflict’ Iraq by the State Department’s ‘Iraq Shack’. However,
President George W. Bush took responsibility for such planning away from State because
he did not trust it and handed it to the Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon, which had
no experience of such work. The subsequent Coalition Provisional Authority was
a disaster.
Chilcot also warns of the dangers
of politicising intelligence. Tony Blair had a whole raft of reasons for
wanting to stay close to Bush, not least maintaining US support for the peace
process in Northern Ireland. However, his lack of influence in the Bush White
House was in stark contrast to his desperate need to remain close to Bush. This
helped lead Blair to interpret the work of the Joint Intelligence Committee
(JIC) purely through the lens of the transatlantic security relationship rather
than wider British interests. It is certainly to the chagrin if not the shame
of the elite British civil service that so many did not challenge the Downing
Street clique, most notably the British Intelligence services. Iraq revealed
the politicisation of the once masterful British civil service which continues
to this day, and which even today too often prevents truth being spoken to
irresponsible power.
Chilcot is also clear about British
military failure. The British Army was humiliated in Iraq, a humiliation that
perhaps marked the beginning of the end of the special ‘Special’ US-UK
Relationship. The gap between the military power Britain’s leaders said Britain
could exert in support of the US soon proved to be false, even though the
Americans must also take a lot of the blame for going into Iraq before all the
forces and resources necessary to succeed were in place. Britain’s influence in
Washington was sorely damaged as a result, and has never really recovered.
One has only to look at the
Defence Planning Assumptions in the UK’s 1998 Strategic Defence Review to
understand that putting a front-line force in excess of 40,000 troops into Iraq
would break the troop bank, to then ‘plan’ in 2006 to go to Afghanistan as well
before the mission in Basra was complete was dangerous military nonsense. The
Defence Logistics Organisation effectively collapsed in 2003. That is why the
occupation force was far smaller than the invasion force and why good military
commanders and their civilian counterparts struggled to create a secure space
in which stabilisation and reconstruction could take place. However, Britain’s
top military commanders at the time must also shoulder some of the blame because
they went into Iraq not to succeed but to get out as quickly as possible.
The failure in Iraq may have also
marked the beginning of the end of Britain’s membership of the EU. After
championing Britain’s future in the EU, and being seen as a de facto leader by
many of the new Central and European members of an enlarged EU, Blair’s failure
effectively ended Britain’s influence in the EU and ceded leadership to Germany.
The opposition of France and Germany to the war proved to be correct,
although the motivations of President Chirac and Chancellor Schroeder were
complex. The subsequent split between
Britain on one side, and France and Germany on another, has never really healed
and the slide towards Brexit accelerated.
Chilcot addresses another issue –
method. In 2008 I wrote two reports following a fact-finding visit to
Afghanistan. Both reports highlighted the same problems of commission and omission.
Put simply, if a Western state or group of states is going to intervene in
places like Afghanistan or Iraq it is vital the ‘human terrain’ is properly
understood and all national and international means – civil and military – are applied
carefully and rigorously to generate outcomes that give the inhabitants hope of
positive change. This all-important unity of effort and purpose backed up by
sufficient forces and resources was never achieved in either country leaving
military commanders to try and close an impossible gap between intent,
capability and capacity.
There is also a dangerous
flip-side to Chilcot. In the wake of Iraq Britain steadily lost strategic
self-confidence, the elite belief in Britain as a power collapsed, and with it
there was a loss of British popular faith in both US leadership and in Britain’s
own Establishment. It also demonstrated the extent to which keeping on the right
side of a poorly-led Washington led Blair and his close clique to lose the
strategic plot as the relationship between ends, ways and means descended into
political fantasy.
At the start of this piece I
raised a question implicit in Chilcot about the very principle of armed
intervention; how do western states deal with the very real threats that do emanate
from such places? A hard truth is that
there will be occasions in future when such interventions will sadly be
necessary. The world is a dangerous place. If Chilcot leads to improved
strategic judgement, better understanding of the challenge, the proper political
use of intelligence, the re-establishment of appropriate distance between
politicians and civil servants, and the closing of the gap between the roles
and missions political leaders expect of armed forces, and the forces and
resources needed to do the job asked of them, then all well and good. If, on
the other hand, Chilcot leads British and other Western political leaders to
conclude that they never want to find themselves alongside Blair facing a
political, media and public opinion ‘lynching’ and abandon the very idea of
military interventions in extremis
then the post-Chilcot world is suddenly more not less dangerous. Reading
Chilcot I was struck at times just how political the report is.
Ultimately, Tony Blair achieved
the exact opposite of what he said he set out to achieve in Iraq and went to
war on a false premise. Over 150,000
Iraqis died, together with some 179 British military personnel, whilst over one
million people were displaced. Blair and the Britain he led must bear full responsibility
such for failure. However, the real blame ultimately lies with President George
W. Bush and Messrs Cheney and Rumsfeld who at the time confused the need for
revenge and ideological fervour for sound statecraft. The threshold for Western military intervention
in the Middle East or anywhere must be necessarily high. Chilcot may now have
set that threshold impossibly high.
Julian Lindley-French
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