 Gen. Richardo Sanchez A former commander of coalition forces in Iraq issued a harsh assessment of U.S. management of the war, saying that American political leaders cost American lives on the battlefield with their "lust for power."
Retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, coalition commander in 2003
and 2004,
called the Iraq war "a nightmare with no end in sight," for which he
said the Bush administration, the State Department and Congress all
share blame.
Sanchez told a group of military reporters in
Arlington, Virginia, on Friday that such dereliction of duty by a
military officer would mean immediate dismissal or court martial, but
the politicians have not been held accountable.
He said the Iraq
war plan from the start was "catastrophically flawed, unrealistically
optimistic," and the administration has not provided the resources
necessary for victory, which he said the military could never achieve
on its own.
Still, he said, the U.S. cannot pull out of Iraq without
causing chaos that would have global implications.
"After more than four years of fighting, America continues its
desperate struggle in Iraq without any concerted effort to devise a
strategy that will achieve victory in that war torn country or in the
greater conflict against extremism," Sanchez said.
Sanchez
pointed to what he said was "neglect and incompetence at the National
Security Council level" which has put the U.S. military into "an
intractable situation" in Iraq.
NSC spokeswoman Kate Starr issued a short response to Sanchez
Friday evening:
"We appreciate his service to the country. As General Petraeus
and
Ambassador Crocker said, there's more work to be done but progress is
being made in Iraq. And that's what we're focused on now."
Sanchez, who retired in 2006, said it was his duty to obey
orders and
not object publicly when he was on active duty, but now that he is
retired he has an obligation to speak out.
"While the
politicians espouse a rhetoric designed to preserve their reputations
and their political power, our soldiers die," he said.
The
administration, he said, has ignored messages from field commanders
that warned repeatedly that "our military alone could not achieve
victory" without corresponding help from the State Department.
"Our National leadership ignored the lessons of World War Two
as we
entered into this war and to this day continue to believe that victory
can be achieved through the application of military power alone," he
said.
"From a catastrophically flawed, unrealistically
optimistic war plan, to the administration's latest surge strategy,
this administration has failed to employ and synchronize its political,
economical and military power," he said.
Sanchez said the
current strategy, which included a "surge" of troops into Iraq, was "a
desperate attempt by the administration that has not accepted the
political and economic realities of this war and they have definitely
not been able to communicate effectively that reality to the American
people."
"Too often, our politicians have been distracted and
they have chosen loyalty to their political parties above loyalty to
the Constitution because of their lust for power," he said.
Congress, he said, has failed its job of oversight.
"Who will demand accountability for the failure of our
national
political leadership involved in the management of this war," he said.
"They have unquestionably been derelict in in the performance of their
duty. In my profession, these types of leaders would be immediately
relieved or court-martialed."
Sanchez was pessimistic about the chances of victory in Iraq
unless there is a major change in commitment.
"Continued manipulations and adjustments to our military
strategy will
not achieve victory," he said. "The best we can do with this flawed
approach is stave off defeat."
"There is no question America is living a nightmare with no
end in sight," he said.
The nightmare will not end, he said, until the partisan
struggle for power in Washington ends.
"National efforts to date have
been corrupted by partisan politics that have prevented us from
devising an effective, executable and supportable strategies," he said.
"At times, these partisan struggles have led us to political decisions
that endangered the lives of our sons and daughters on the battlefield.
The unmistakable message was that political power had greater priority
than our national security objectives."
"Overcoming this
strategic failure is the first step toward achieving victory in Iraq,"
he said. "Without bipartisan cooperation, we are doomed to fail. There
is nothing going on today in Washington that would give us hope."
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