By Jeremy Lott on 1.20.09 @ 6:06AM
President Bush was a Prince of a guy, but not when it came to
Iraq.
George W. Bush's relationship with Saudi Arabia's Prince Bandar
was a close one. They were sometimes spotted holding hands in
public in observance of Saudi custom. So when Bandar came calling
at the White House shortly after Baghdad had fallen to American
forces, we might expect that what he said carried serious weight.
Bandar was worried about the stability of the country. He urged
Bush not to disband Iraq's military or intelligence services. The
prince advised that Bush should remove the Iraqi leadership
"because of their bloody hands" but not do away with Iraqi
institutions. Rather, he should fire everyone down to the rank of
colonel in the military and a similar rank in the intelligence
services, and use those underlings to find Saddam Hussein, who
was still on the lam, and to root out Baathist loyalists and
other troublemakers.
Bandar encountered resistance so he pressed the point. The
underlings might not be the greatest people, but they could help
to stabilize Iraq, and it wasn't as if the U.S. government would
be obliged to hand the country over to them. "Look, bad people
find bad people and then after that you get rid of them." Bandar
said. "Double cross them. I mean, for God's sake, who said that
we owe them anything?"
"That's too Machiavellian," said someone who took part in that
White House meeting. According to Bob Woodward, the speaker was
either President Bush or national security adviser and future
secretary of state Condoleezza Rice. The Bush administration went
ahead and disbanded the military -- with predictable results.
Iraq devolved into chaos and sectionalism, and far too much blood
was shed.
"Too Machiavellian..." It would be harder to come up with a more
pithy summary of why Bush's foreign policy fell apart. He never
understood that his soaring rhetoric of human freedom needed to
be tempered by guile and the particular interests of his own
nation.
It's one thing to say that "freedom is the universal gift of
Almighty God" or that "liberty and justice light the path to
peace," as Bush did in his final televised address from the White
House. Those are fairly standard staples of presidential
rhetoric. It's quite another to decide that the world should
conform to your ideals and go mucking about the globe assuming
that everyone -- from heads of state to angry mullahs to rock
throwing, mortar-launching mobs -- will suddenly slap their
foreheads and wonder, "Why didn't we think of that?"
Many critics claim that Bush lied us into war in Iraq but that
gives him more credit than he merits. Bush is a decent but
extremely naive man who could never see the wisdom in
Machiavelli's advice that, say, a ruler should preach virtue but
practice it sparingly; encourage the oppressed but not with the
force of your own armies, unless you're in the market for new
territory; regard reports of spies with skepticism; and be wary
of the advice of flatterers and men with axes to grind.
Bush talked often of good and evil, but couldn't recognize evil
when he observed it in its more banal permutations. He said
publicly that Vladimir Putin had a good soul and then appeared
shocked when Putin went on to behave like just about every other
Russian autocrat save Czar Alexander II. He never could
understand why many countries resisted going into Iraq to spread
freedom.
In fact, Bush got so caught up in his notion of democracy
promotion that his State Department insisted Hamas be allowed to
stand for election in Palestine. The geniuses at Foggy Bottom
looked at polls that predicted the terror-sponsoring organization
probably wouldn't win, took a cue from their starry-eyed
commander-in-chief, and figured, what could it hurt?
topics:
George W. Bush, Prince Bandar, Bob Woodward, Hamas