THE WASHINGTON TIMES EDITORIAL - Ambassador Ryan Crocker, a veteran of
more than three and a half decades in the U.S. Foreign Service, chooses
his words with great care and is not given to bombast. So, when the
United States ambassador to Iraq suggests that a precipitous withdrawal
of American troops from that country could lead to a bloodbath on the
scale of the Rwandan genocide of of the 1990s, serious people need to
listen.
Mr. Crocker, who is expected to retire in January when the next
president of the United States is sworn in, speaks bluntly about the
need for a mature discussion in this country about what will happen if
U.S. troops are withdrawn before Iraq is stabilized. "I hear people
say: Bring the troops home and end the war," Mr. Crocker said Friday at
a roundtable with journalists at the State Department. "My g-d... It's
going to give you a... war of significantly greater proportions. I
remember how we reacted to Rwanda," Mr. Crocker said, referring to the
genocide that occurred in 1994, in which an estimated 800,000 people
were slaughtered.
If American forces in Iraq are seen to be "heading for the doors" not
because conditions have improved but "because we don't want to do this
any more," he said, it would sap the Iraqi people's will to make
difficult political compromises — which Iraqi legislators have been
doing on contentious issues such as elections, devolving power to local
governments and sharing oil revenues. This would result in a "vicious
spiral" in which ethnic and sectarian groups become so preoccupied with
survival that they stop trying to work out their differences.
Mr. Crocker is a highly respected diplomat who previously served as
ambassador to Kuwait and ambassador to Syria, and was assigned to the
U.S. Embassy in Beirut in 1983 when it was bombed by Hezbollah. He has
won numerous awards for bravery and distinguished service. He certainly
deserved better than the shabby, insulting treatment he received from
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who on April 3 suggested that Mr. Crocker
might not testify truthfully and would avoid discussing the problems in
Iraq. In fact, Mr. Crocker has been candid — sometimes brutally so — in
describing the situation there. He lamented the fact that Iran is doing
everything it can to infiltrate Iraq, while the Arab nations treat the
country like a pariah: No Arab cabinet minister has visited in a year,
and there is not a single Arab ambassador in Baghdad. "This is a time
for Arabs to step up" and build a relationship with Iraq, Mr. Crocker
says.
Iran, acting in concern with Muqtada al-Sadr and others, is doing all
it an to "coopt" Iraqis, Mr. Crocker says, but there has been a
negative reaction by Sunni and Shi'ite Iraqis to the behavior of the
militias and to Iranian meddling. Some time in the fall, Iraq is slated
to hold national elections. This time, Sunni elements who boycotted
previous elections will participate. But "there will be violence" aimed
at derailing the elections, Mr. Crocker says bluntly. "It will be our
priority to minimize that."
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