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June 12, 2005
Memo: U.S. Lacked Full Postwar Iraq Plan
Advisers to Blair Predicted Instability
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 12, 2005; A01
A briefing paper prepared for British Prime Minister Tony
Blair and his top advisers eight months before the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq concluded that the U.S. military was not
preparing adequately for what the British memo predicted
would be a "protracted and costly" postwar occupation of
that country.
The eight-page memo, written in advance of a July 23,
2002, Downing Street meeting on Iraq, provides new insights
into how senior British officials saw a Bush administration
decision to go to war as inevitable, and realized more
clearly than their American counterparts the potential for
the post-invasion instability that continues to plague Iraq.
In its introduction, the memo "Iraq: Conditions for
Military Action" notes that U.S. "military planning for
action against Iraq is proceeding apace," but adds that
"little thought" has been given to, among other things, "the
aftermath and how to shape it."
The July 21 memo was produced by Blair's staff in
preparation for a meeting with his national security team
two days later that has become controversial on both sides
of the Atlantic since last month's disclosure of official
notes summarizing the session.
In those meeting minutes -- which have come to be known
as the Downing Street Memo -- British officials who had just
returned from Washington said Bush and his aides believed
war was inevitable and were determined to use intelligence
about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction and his
relations with terrorists to justify invasion of Iraq.
The "intelligence and facts were being fixed around the
policy," said the memo -- an assertion attributed to the
then-chief of British intelligence, and denied by U.S.
officials and by Blair at a news conference with Bush last
week in Washington. Democrats in Congress led by Rep. John
Conyers Jr. (Mich.), however, have scheduled an unofficial
hearing on the matter for Thursday.
Now, disclosure of the memo written in advance of that
meeting -- and other British documents recently made public
-- show that Blair's aides were not just concerned about
Washington's justifications for invasion but also believed
the Bush team lacked understanding of what could happen in
the aftermath.
In a section titled "Benefits/Risks," the July 21 memo
states, "Even with a legal base and a viable military plan,
we would still need to ensure that the benefits of action
outweigh the risks."
Saying that "we need to be sure that the outcome of the
military action would match our objective," the memo's
authors point out, "A post-war occupation of Iraq could lead
to a protracted and costly nation-building exercise." The
authors add, "As already made clear, the U.S. military plans
are virtually silent on this point. Washington could look to
us to share a disproportionate share of the burden."
That memo and other internal British government documents
were originally obtained by Michael Smith, who writes for
the London Sunday Times. Excerpts were made available to The
Washington Post, and the material was confirmed as authentic
by British sources who sought anonymity because they are not
authorized to discuss the matter.
The Bush administration's failure to plan adequately for
the postwar period has been well documented. The Pentagon,
for example, ignored extensive State Department studies of
how to achieve stability after an invasion, administer a
postwar government and rebuild the country. And
administration officials have acknowledged the mistake of
dismantling the Iraqi army and canceling pensions to its
veteran officers -- which many say hindered security,
enhanced anti-U.S. feeling and aided what would later become
a violent insurgency.
Testimony by then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul D.
Wolfowitz, one of the chief architects of Iraq policy,
before a House subcommittee on Feb. 28, 2003, just weeks
before the invasion, illustrated the optimistic view the
administration had of postwar Iraq. He said containment of
Hussein the previous 12 years had cost "slightly over $30
billion," adding, "I can't imagine anyone here wanting to
spend another $30 billion to be there for another 12 years."
As of May, the Congressional Research Service estimated that
Congress has approved $208 billion for the war in Iraq since
2003.
The British, however, had begun focusing on doubts about
a postwar Iraq in early 2002, according to internal memos.
A March 14 memo to Blair from David Manning, then the
prime minister's foreign policy adviser and now British
ambassador in Washington, reported on talks with
then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice. Among the
"big questions" coming out of his sessions, Manning
reported, was that the president "has yet to find the
answers . . . [and] what happens on the morning after."
About 10 days later, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw wrote a
memo to prepare Blair for a meeting in Crawford, Tex., on
April 8. Straw said "the big question" about military action
against Hussein was, "how there can be any certainty that
the replacement regime will be any better," as "Iraq has no
history of democracy."
Straw said the U.S. assessments "assumed regime change as
a means of eliminating Iraq's WMD [weapons of mass
destruction] threat. But none has satisfactorily answered
how that regime change is to be secured. . . ."
Later in the summer, the postwar doubts would be raised
again, at the July 23 meeting memorialized in the Downing
Street Memo. Richard Dearlove, then head of MI6, the British
intelligence service, reported on his meetings with senior
Bush officials. At one point, Dearlove said, "There was
little discussion in Washington of the aftermath after
military action."
Republican Party Chairman Ken Mehlman, appearing June 5
on "Meet the Press," disagreed with Dearlove's remark. "I
think that there was clearly planning that occurred."
The Blair government, unlike its U.S. counterparts,
always doubted that coalition troops would be uniformly
welcomed, and sought U.N. participation in the invasion in
part to set the stage for an international occupation and
reconstruction of Iraq, said British officials interviewed
recently. London was aware that the State Department had
studied how to deal with an invasion's aftermath. But the
British government was "shocked," in the words of one
official, "when we discovered that in the postwar period the
Defense Department would still be running the show."
The Downing Street Memo has been the subject of debate
since the London Sunday Times first published it May 1.
Opponents of the war say it proved the Bush administration
was determined to invade months before the president said he
made that decision.
Neither Bush nor Blair has publicly challenged the
authenticity of the July 23 memo, nor has Dearlove spoken
publicly about it. One British diplomat said there are
different interpretations.
Last week, it was the subject of questions posed to Blair
and Bush during the former's visit to Washington.
Asked about Dearlove being quoted as saying that in the
United States, intelligence was being "fixed around the
policy" of removing Hussein by military action, Blair said,
"No, the facts were not being fixed in any shape or form at
all." He then went on to discuss the British plan, outlined
in the memo, to go to the United Nations to get weapons
inspectors back into Iraq.
Bush said he had read "characterizations of the memo,"
pointing out that it was released in the middle of Blair's
reelection campaign, and that the United States and Britain
went to the United Nations to exhaust diplomatic options
before the invasion.
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