First Lt. Pete Hegseth '03, on foot patrol in Samarra, Iraq, with a group
of local children.
First Lt. Pete Hegseth '03, left, with the mayor of Samarra, Iraq, and another
soldier from the 101st Airborne Division.
Photo courtesy Pete Hegseth '03
November 8, 2006: The
'bare-minimum approach' to Iraq isn't working
By Pete Hegseth '03
I've heard President Bush repeatedly state he will send more troops
to Iraq if the commanders on the ground ask for them. I think, having
returned home from Iraq three months ago, that there must be a breakdown
in communication somewhere along the line. Maybe units on the ground
are painting too rosy a picture for the generals. Perhaps the generals
aren't asking because it goes against the "can-do" ethos of the
Army. Possibly the military is being squeezed by the Pentagon to
do more with less. Or maybe the White House doesn't want to admit
more troops are needed. In any case, while I do not have the answers
nor do I seek to place blame, it is painfully obvious there's a
disconnect.
I volunteered to serve in Iraq because I believe in our mission
there. I share the president's conviction about the Iraq war –
we can and must win, for the Iraqi people, for the future of our
country, and for peace-loving people everywhere. But I'm frustrated.
America is fighting with a hand tied behind its back. Soldiers have
all the equipment we need – armored Humvees, body armor for
every body part, superior technology, etc. – but we simply
do not have enough troops in Iraq, and we need them now.
After witnessing two national elections during three months in
Baghdad, my Army unit moved north to Samarra, where we spent eight
months sowing the seeds of progress. While we had success in uprooting
the insurgency and building the local government, it wasn't enough.
We had just enough troops to control Samarra and secure ourselves,
but not enough to bring lasting stability or security. "Not enough"
became the story of my year in Iraq.
The future of Samarra, and Iraq as a whole, ultimately lies in
the hands of her people – their sympathies are the ultimate
prize in this war. No matter how many insurgents we kill, city leaders
we meet, or policemen we enlist, it is all for naught if we cannot
provide security and stability. Tribal sheikhs told us that even
within Samarra – deep in the Sunni triangle – a vast
majority of people just want peace and order and will side with
whoever can provide it. Right now Samarrans rightfully question
who that will be.
The end goal in Samarra is for Iraqis to do everything for themselves.
But their government and security forces are not ready. Insurgents
use death threats and murder to assert power over anyone working
with the City Council or joining the police force. This atmosphere
forces moderate Samarrans to keep their mouths shut, and their silence
abets the insurgents who live and fight in Samarra. Despite killing
scores of insurgents, we are unable to provide lasting security,
and so the Samarran street slips away.
Two things are to blame for our predicament, one a corollary of
the other. The first reason is that we did not have enough troops
in Samarra. The skill and courage of 150 American soldiers prevented
chaos, but was never enough to fully secure a city of 120,000 people
or maintain the rule of law. The soldiers in the city were preoccupied
with defending themselves and conducting night raids, and were therefore
largely unable to regularly patrol during the day – thus giving
insurgents reign to move freely and intimidate the local population.
A visitor in Samarra on an average day would be hard-pressed to
point out a single American Humvee traversing local neighborhoods.
The same is true for Baghdad.
Our four-vehicle civil-affairs patrol was often the only American
presence deep inside the city and we were frequently greeted by
locals with the question, "Where have you been?" Americans can't
of course be omnipresent; but we should at least be there when it
matters. When Americans are there, either the insurgents are not
or they are on the losing side of a firefight.
Second, because of a lack of troops, American military leaders
are forced to make a choice between mission objectives and self-preservation.
Many of our leaders are opting to guard supply routes and coagulate
on sprawling military bases, rather than consistently moving into
dangerous areas and fighting the insurgency. In our case, we had
500 soldiers stationed outside Samarra who made infrequent trips
into the city center. There is little reason why most of these troops
were not stationed inside Samarra, canvassing every neighborhood
with platoon-sized patrol bases and suffocating insurgent operations.
Rather than take the risks necessary – like small patrol bases
and frequent foot patrols – our unit opted to secure itself
and its supply routes rather than commit resources inside the city.
And while this approach is safer in the short run, it only prolongs
mission accomplishment, ultimately endangering more troops. We often
speculated that our unit would be back next year, driving the same
streets with even fewer guys.
In due time, the Iraqi security forces will take over Samarra,
but they are not ready yet. If the Americans left today, the Iraqis
would be co-opted by the insurgents – who are utterly ruthless,
willing to kill family members of policemen or decapitate Iraqi
soldiers to preserve disorder. It will take time. Both the Iraqi
army and Samarra police need to get bloodied a bit and bounce back,
proving their strength to the people. They will eventually be ready,
but until then, security belongs to us.
I also understand calling for more troops is contrary to conventional
thinking inside government and the military. Supporters of the current
approach argue sending more troops would further inflame anti-American
sentiment, incite more violence, and retard independent progress.
My experience suggests otherwise. American troops are tolerated,
even welcomed, when they effectively provide security; but their
presence is cursed when it does not accompany progress. Violence
persists not because American troops are present, but because our
presence is futile. Many local leaders asked us, "How come the most
powerful country in the world cannot defeat local criminals and
thugs?" They suggested our failure was part of a larger conspiracy
to keep the Iraqi people suffering.
I have not lost the optimism that sent me to Iraq. We did make
gains. Our 10-man civil-affairs team established good relationships
with brave Iraqi leaders and sat across from them as equals. I watched
city leaders battle insurgents, not only with guns but with newspapers
and economic development. By the time we left, the City Council
was meeting on its own accord and with increasing legitimacy, forming
committees to oversee fuel allocation, new construction, and security.
Increased home construction was evident and local markets were open.
Even the security situation inside the city improved. Previous
summers in Samarra had been extremely violent, but the summer of
2006 was different. Days passed without a significant attack inside
the city. Less than 150 Americans, along with Iraqi counterparts,
controlled a town of over 120,000 Sunni Arabs through targeted raids
and sniper operations. One local insurgent even begged city leaders
for amnesty in exchange for good conduct. Our unit killed or captured
hundreds of insurgents, knocking the wind out of the local insurgency
– but never crushing it.
I believe, as the president noted, that "the safety of America
depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad."
Why then do we have just enough troops in Iraq not to lose? Most
of the people I've spoken with since coming home – those both
for and against the war – believe we must finish the job in
Iraq. Americans understand a defeat in Iraq would have horrible
consequences for America and its allies for decades to come. America
has the capacity to win and the will to support a winning strategy.
Why then are we pursuing a bare minimum approach?
First Lt. Pete Hegseth '03, who served in ROTC while at Princeton,
was an infantry platoon leader and assistant civil-military operations
officer in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division.