General takes aim at Iraq action
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Andrew Edwards
Retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, who was the top U.S. official in Iraq
immediately after the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime, outlined his
views on post-invasion policies during a brief address Friday morning
to a small audience at The Center Club.
Inside Iraq, Garner was in charge of rebuilding efforts from April
to May 2003, when he was replaced by former Ambassador L. Paul Bremer
III.
Garner said U.S. officials have made mistakes in Iraq, but gave
high praise to American military troops serving in there and
encouraged the audience to do the same.
“When you see one in the airport, walk up to him and hug him and
say, ‘Thank you for your service. Here’s my first-class ticket,’”
Garner said.
The situation in Iraq, Garner asserted, is not as dire as the
public may conclude from news reports. The retired general, who also
served in Vietnam, argued that comparisons between that war and Iraq
are inaccurate. Garner said U.S. forces in Iraq are fighting
terrorists and guerrillas, not organized fighters like the North
Vietnamese Army.
The only similarity between Iraq and Vietnam, Garner said, is his
perception that reporters covering both wars focused on negative
information.
“The only common thread that I can tell between Vietnam and Iraq
is the media -- which will never report anything good,” he contended.
Garner also derided as myth the idea that U.S. officials did not
plan for post-invasion Iraq. He said official plans included
preparations for the possible displacement of millions of Iraqis, oil
field fires, famine and epidemics. He acknowledged U.S. planners did
not anticipate the magnitude of the ongoing insurgency.
“No one, myself included, thought it would be to the degree it
is,” Garner said.
More troops should have been deployed to secure post-invasion
efforts, Garner said. He also said dissolving the Iraqi army and
removing many bureaucrats who were members of Hussein’s Baath Party
created about 250,000 enemies for American forces.
Garner thinks democracy can take hold in Iraq, but people should
not expect an ideal government to immediately flower in there. He
reminded the audience that the United States took about 200 years to
abolish slavery, let women vote and end segregation.
If Iraq’s problems prove too much to overcome, Garner argued the
United States should hedge its bets with Iraq’s northern region of
Kurdistan. He included Kurdistan with Israel and Turkey in his list
of the Middle East’s three democracies.
For postwar efforts to succeed, Garner said Iraq should develop a
federal system to represent Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, provide
employment to youth who might otherwise become terrorists and share
oil revenues with Iraqi citizens.
One of the sponsors of Friday’s event was GR Capital Asset
Management, which has offices in Newport Beach. Company President
Todd Rustman said he has invested in Iraqi currency and was
interested to hear a firsthand perspective of Iraq.
“There’s a lot more than meets the eye,” Rustman said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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