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July 4, 2005
The Metrics Of Success In Iraq
By David S. Broder
President Bush is facing an early legal deadline to
deliver what he has been most resistant to providing: a set
of specific benchmarks for measuring progress toward
military and political stability in Iraq.
Under a little-noticed provision of the defense spending
bill passed by Congress in May, Defense Secretary Don
Rumsfeld has until July 11 to send Capitol Hill a
"comprehensive set of performance indicators and measures of
stability and security" two years after the fall of Saddam
Hussein.
A Pentagon spokeswoman, responding to my inquiry, said
last week, "We are working toward completing the report by
the due date."
If and when it comes in, it could do much more than the
president's Tuesday night speech at Fort Bragg to provide a
factual basis for judging how close we may be to reaching
our goals in Iraq.
In that address, Bush once again demolished a straw man,
denouncing any talk of a deadline for withdrawal of U.S. and
coalition forces and any timetable for phasing them out.
While public support for a pullout has grown, almost no one
in Congress is advocating such a step.
What serious people are asking of the administration is a
set of yardsticks by which the situation in Iraq can be
realistically measured -- and accountability established for
a strategy to reach those goals. That is something the
president has refused to provide, beyond his cliched
declaration that "the United States will stay as long as
necessary -- and not one day longer."
It is hard to understand his resistance to this perfectly
reasonable demand for a set of metrics by which all
concerned -- Congress and the administration, service
members and their families, and the general public -- could
judge what is happening.
This is our first MBA president, a business school grad
who generally operates on the principle that if you can't
measure something, you are flying blind. He insists that his
Office of Management and Budget keep score on how well each
department and agency is meeting its program
responsibilities. Why not measure the enormously expensive
investment in Iraq?
Metrics are exactly what the serious critics in Congress
say have been lacking. In a thoughtful speech on June 21,
Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, a Democrat who supported the
invasion and vehemently opposes an early withdrawal, said
continued public support depends on "a new compact between
the administration and Congress to secure the informed
consent of the American people, so that they give the
president the time we need to succeed in Iraq."
"Specifically," Biden said, "the administration should
develop with Congress clear benchmarks or goals in key
areas: security, governance and politics, reconstruction and
burden-sharing. We in Congress should aggressively assert
our oversight responsibility by insisting that the
administration report on progress toward those goals every
month in public testimony."
Last week Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania, the ranking
Democrat on the defense Appropriations subcommittee, pointed
to language in the report accompanying May's Iraq funding
bill that would satisfy most of those demands. It orders the
first detailed status report on July 11 and follow-ups every
90 days thereafter.
The information required is specific and detailed. It
includes such measures of the security envi-
ronment as the number of engagements per day, the count
of trained Iraqi forces, the estimated strength of the Iraqi
insurgency and the role of foreign fighters.
It orders up indicators of economic activity, including
unemployment levels, electricity, water and oil production
rates, and hunger and poverty levels.
It requires detailed information on the training of Iraqi
military and security forces, their equipment, and their
capabilities -- and the timetables for achieving full
readiness.
It aims to end the confusion over Iraq's forces by asking
specifically which Iraqi battalions are capable of operating
independently, which can fight if supported by coalition
forces and which are not ready to conduct counterinsurgency
operations even with help. It also requires documentation on
their absentee rates and calls for similar information on
the Iraqi police forces and their training.
Finally, it directs Rumsfeld to provide -- either in
public or in classified annexes -- an estimate of U.S.
military forces needed in Iraq through the end of calendar
2006 and the criteria the administration will use to
determine when it is safe to begin withdrawing forces from
that country.
As a senior congressional aide told me, "if the Pentagon
takes the law seriously and responds as robustly as it is
capable of doing," we may finally begin to learn where we
stand. Candid answers could restore the trust required to
sustain the effort in Iraq. Bush's speeches don't meet that
need.
davidbroder@washpost.com |