[国际新闻] 美刊盘点美军将领伊战重大失误

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美国《新闻周刊》1月22日(提前出版)一期发表题为「对高官的指责」的文章,盘点美军在伊拉克战争中的失误。文章摘要如下。
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虽然大家对伊拉克的乱局多有诟病,但是值得注意的是很少有人会对美国军队提出批评。美国人希望对战场上士兵们所做的牺牲表示敬意。在国会山上和在有线电视新闻访谈节目中相互攻讦的较量过程中,武装部队基本上都躲过去了。
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3 v8 Q6 F- ^  l* z; Q. g人在德国 社区然而,一些将领并不确定他们应不应该躲过去。2003年3月入侵伊拉克时担任陆军副参谋长的杰克•凯内将军对《新闻周刊》说:「每个人都意识到我们犯下了错误。难的是怎样从这些错误中接受教训。」5 S# H" E+ }% O7 V& ~
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没有人能比戴维•彼得雷乌斯中将更了解陆军在伊拉克所做的蠢事了。这位驻伊美军的指挥官刚刚被选来找出更好的解决方法。14个月来,彼得雷乌斯监督了陆军用来指导打击反叛活动的新的战地手册的撰写工作。手册说头号错误就是「过于强调杀戮和俘获敌人,而忽视了稳定和接触广大人民」。这一点很好地说明了自从第一颗简易爆炸装置引爆以来美国陆军在伊拉克所做的一切。6 @; ]% e6 o0 R' ]" z, [+ N7 X* b
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为了理解彼得雷乌斯所面对的压力以及前往伊拉克的士兵所面临的挑战,我们有必要看看陆军领导层在伊拉克犯下的错误有多么严重。& B# t; H6 s4 \& b( I2 Y, S$ v
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问题几乎是很快就来了。在入侵伊拉克前夕,当时的陆军参谋长埃里克•新关预测说入侵需要「大约几十万士兵」。这个提议很快遭到国防部副部长、新保守主义者保罗•沃尔福威茨的嘲笑,认为这是「异想天开」。在入侵伊拉克前几周召开了两次总统与高级指挥官参加的会议。据参加会议但不愿透露姓名的两个人说当时新关并没有把自己的担心说出来。9个月前,当《新闻周刊》问及他是否应该在总统身上多使点劲时,新关回答说:「也许是应该的。」
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从2003年年中开始一直担任中央司令部司令直到最近被威廉•法伦上将所取代的约翰•阿比紮伊德上将就是一个鲜明的例子。作为一名阿拉伯裔美国人,他比大多数人都了解一个西方国家占领一个伊斯兰国家时所产生的问题。他警告说占领军至少需要4万人的伊拉克部队才能控制安全局势。可是没有提出太多反对意见的他批准了布什政府战后解散伊拉克军队的错误决定。
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回头来看,陆军在入侵伊拉克后根本就没有制定打击反叛分子的战略,这件事似乎是不可思议的。当彼得雷乌斯的前任乔治•凯西作为联军总司令来到巴格达的司令部时,发现根本就没有打击反叛分子的计划。
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陆军的策划人员并没有忘记成功的闪电战后实施长期占领所面对的风险。战前任中央司令部司令的安东尼•津尼上将说:「困扰我们的一个问题是:如果我们要去伊拉克,我们将会得到一个破碎的社会。」但是他的接任者汤米•弗兰克斯上将几乎完全关注入侵的过程,基本上忽视了战后的安排。
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* X0 M+ Y3 h7 k' g/ O5 ^rs238848.rs.hosteurope.de当时任陆军副参谋长的杰克•基恩对《新闻周刊》说,弗兰克斯认为被称作第四阶段的战后安排是另一位将军、重建与人道援助办公室领导人杰伊•加纳(不久后被一名文官保罗•布雷默所取代)的责任。基恩直言道:「弗兰克斯大错特错。我认为他做错了,他实际上把第四阶段的事推得一干二净。」
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基恩说:「我觉得有愧,因为我知道陆军根本没有准备好面对这一切。」但是基恩也没有公开发出警报。rs238848.rs.hosteurope.de: F9 j1 }+ x& a& W2 o- G( B: T0 }
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在巴格达周边,陆军的手段是「有力的」;它可以使用强大火力和过度的武力。但由于没有接受如何打击反叛分子的训练,第四步兵师师长雷•奥迪尔诺中将命令他的手下踢开房门,把所有长得像反叛分子的人都抓起来。由于阿布格里卜监狱人满为患,犯人们成为没有经过什么训练、不知所措的狱卒袭击的目标。结果就是美国在伊拉克以及在阿拉伯和穆斯林世界的形象糟糕之极。

Blame for the Top Brass
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Given all the recriminations over the mess in Iraq, it is remarkable how little criticism has fallen on the U.S. military. Americans want to honor the sacrifice of the troops in the field and they may feel guilty about the cold reception given many veterans returning from the Vietnam War. But in the public blame game that's erupted on Capitol Hill and on the cable news talk shows, the armed services are largely given a free pass.
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Some top soldiers, however, aren't so sure they should be let off the hook. Is there, NEWSWEEK asked retired Gen. William Nash, who commanded U.S. forces in Bosnia in the 1990s and remains plugged in, a sense within the Army of mistakes made in Iraq? "It's pervasive," he answered. Gen. Jack Keane, the Army vice chief of staff at the time of the Iraq invasion in March 2003, told NEWSWEEK: "Everyone recognizes that we made mistakes. The harder part is what to learn from them."
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7 U" c% N8 v8 J8 u  _rs238848.rs.hosteurope.deNo one understands the Army's march of folly in Iraq better than the commander who has just been chosen to find a better way: Lt. Gen. David Petraeus. For the past 14 months, Petraeus has supervised the writing of the Army's new field manual on counterinsurgency warfare, FM 3-24. Mistake No. 1, the manual instructs, is to "overemphasize killing and capturing the enemy rather than securing and engaging the populace." That pretty well describes what the Army has done in Iraq since the first improvised explosive devices began detonating.
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* A& S9 P1 q' T3 Wrs238848.rs.hosteurope.dePetraeus was an exception. While other generals were trying by force to crush the insurgents, Petraeus was working to isolate them by winning the population's hearts and minds. The commander of the 101st Airborne, he labored to pacify Mosul, the area of northern Iraq under his control in the first year after the invasion, by satisfying the people's needs: security, jobs, the repair of local utilities and the rebirth of local democracy. His success there led the press and military establishment to regard him as a "water walker"; the praise heaped on him—NEWSWEEK ran a cover story in July 2004 asking, "Can This Man Save Iraq?"—is qualified only by jealousy.2 ^) d" M$ w, v7 j3 ~5 v5 E
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Yet a question remains about the 54-year-old, wiry, intense, brilliant three-star general President George W. Bush appointed to lead Coalition forces in Iraq. Will Petraeus, like so many generals in all wars before him, be honor- and duty-bound by the Army's chief virtue, which is also its main vice: the tendency to smartly salute civilian superiors, no matter how wrongheaded they are?
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3 U2 j* |% A2 B) E5 n$ q9 u人在德国 社区The military values obedience for an essential reason. "The Army is in the business of training 18-year-olds to expose themselves to machine-gun fire," says Stephen Biddle, a former professor of national-security studies at the Army War College. The top brass must defer to civilians in a democracy. The American public would not be well served by generals who thumb their noses at the commander in chief in the style of Douglas A. MacArthur, whom President Harry S Truman had to relieve for disloyalty during the Korean War. But surely the model is not former Defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who bullied the top brass into submission for most of the Iraq war.
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With Rumsfeld gone, Petraeus should have more room to maneuver. (The new secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, is much more low-key and signaled last week that he will back the military's pent-up demand for more troops—an additional 92,000 soldiers and Marines.) But some of Petraeus's Army colleagues fear he has just signed himself up—and by extension committed the Army—to Mission: Impossible. Bush's plan to "surge" just over 20,000 troops to Iraq is seen by many within the military as a foolish political compromise—too few troops to make a long-term difference, but enough to get more U.S. troops killed. Bush is no longer saying that he listens to his generals, and indeed he appears to have shrugged off the advice of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Peter Pace, who wanted to limit the troop increase to just a few thousand men. So why did Petraeus go along? In private conversations with members of Congress, Petraeus has been careful. He has warned that insurgencies are protracted, and that no one man can be expected to find a winning formula overnight. He is a realist about his Iraqi allies, including Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki. (Petraeus was once asked why Iraq had no George Washingtons. "Because," he replied, "Saddam would have had them taken out and shot.") It may be that Petraeus, for all his circumspection, is trying to pull off something like a miracle. He has, says Andrew Krepinevich, an old friend since their days on the West Point faculty, "a sense of destiny."
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/ |7 I% j( P) q: ]$ z, Z/ F' j  K6 WPetraeus is starting in a deep hole that was dug not just by the Army's civilian bosses, but by its uniformed leaders. It is worth examining just how flawed the Army's leadership has been in Iraq to understand the pressures on Petraeus and the immense challenge faced by the soldiers and Marines bound for Iraq.0 p$ f6 T) E# P6 k+ G6 H0 k1 f& E" m
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" Q- Y" e, N+ cThe problems began almost immediately. On the eve of the invasion, Eric Shinseki, then the Army chief of staff, predicted that an occupation would require "something on the order of several hundred thousand soldiers." The proposal was quickly ridiculed as "outlandish" by neoconservative Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz. A myth has grown around Shinseki's comments, which were made in response to a senator's question at a hearing. At two meetings of top commanders with the president in the weeks before the war—the real time for truth telling—Shinseki did not raise this concern, say two participants who did not want to be identified discussing presidential meetings. Asked nine months ago by NEWSWEEK if he should have pressed harder with the president, Shinseki answered, "Probably that's fair."
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3 O( F9 \  M0 z$ V) y# z3 MArmy Gen. John Abizaid, who ran Central Command from mid-2003 until his recent replacement by Adm. William Fallon, is a particularly poignant case of duty's trumping wisdom. An Arab-American, he was more sensitive than most to the problems of a Western nation's occupying an Islamic one. He warned that the occupiers urgently needed at least 40,000 Iraqi troops to handle security. And yet, with little apparent protest, he signed on to the Bush administration's misguided decision to disband the Iraqi Army after the war. (Abizaid did not respond to a request for comment.)
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It seems incredible, in retrospect, that the Army had no strategy for battling insurgents after the invasion. When Petraeus's predecessor, Gen. George Casey, arrived at Baghdad headquarters as the commander of Coalition forces, he asked his staff to set up a meeting with the HQ's counterinsurgency team. "His request was met with silence," reports retired Col. Douglas Macgregor, a gulf-war veteran and author of an admired study of combat organization. (There was no such staff or counterinsurgency plan.) In his Princeton University Ph.D. thesis on the lessons of the Vietnam War, Petraeus wrote that the Army should prepare for the inevitability of future "low-intensity wars," nonconventional combat that involves civilians and guerrilla fighters. But most generals learned a different lesson from failure in Vietnam. Public revulsion at the war nearly destroyed what the Army cherished most—the support of the citizenry. The solution? Leave guerrilla fighting to a few highly trained Special Forces. The main Army would concentrate on Big Wars, to be fought with speed, mobility and lethal high-tech weaponry.+ ^) }: a  q0 c( h5 G& `( O. f4 e

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Army planners were not oblivious to the risks of a long occupation after a successful, lightning invasion. The pre-war chief of Central Command, Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, says, "The thing that kept getting us was: if you go into Iraq you are going to inherit a broken society." But his successor, Gen. Tommy Franks, concentrated almost entirely on the invasion— and essentially ignored postwar planning. Sens. John Warner and Carl Levin, the ranking Republican and Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, asked Franks why. "He said he was told to stay the hell out of it" by his civilian boss, Rumsfeld, Levin recalled. (Franks denies this.)
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* T0 a0 B8 _; E5 z4 IGen. Jack Keane, at the time the Army's vice chief of staff, told NEWSWEEK that Franks believed that the postwar planning, known as Phase Four, was the responsibility of a different general, retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, head of the tiny, understaffed Office for Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (who in turn was soon replaced by a civilian, Ambassador Paul Bremer). "Franks was dead wrong, and I don't believe he did this thing right, but he literally washed his hands of this Phase Four stuff," says Keane, speaking with unusual bluntness about a fellow officer. (Franks disagrees, pointing out that Garner served under him.)
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Keane himself was stepping down just as the insurgency started in late spring 2003. "I went to Iraq in June, looked at it and I knew we were in deep s--t," Keane told news-week. "I was going out the door. I felt frustrated. Frustrated with the situation, frustrated with myself and everything else. And somewhat guilty because I knew how ill prepared the Army was to deal with it." But Keane gave no public warnings.
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In and around Baghdad, the Army's approach was "kinetic"; it would use firepower and brute force. Untrained in counterinsurgency, the commander of the Fourth Infantry Division, Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, ordered his men to kick in doors and arrest any man who looked like an insurgent. Overflowing their cells at Abu Ghraib, the prisoners became targets of poorly trained, overwhelmed guards. The consequences to America's image in Iraq—and in the Arab and Muslim worlds—were disastrous. (Odierno, who has recently gone back to Baghdad, where he will be working under Petraeus, insisted in an earlier interview with NEWSWEEK that he had not been heavy-handed.)
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In Mosul, in the first months after the invasion, Petraeus—sensitive to the lessons of Vietnam—was restraining the men of the 101st Airborne, urging them to interact peaceably with the locals. When troops went on cordon-and-search operations, they were instructed to tell each homeowner, "Thank you for allowing us to search your home." The velvet-hammer approach worked—at least for a while. Eventually, jihadists infiltrated from Anbar province in the west into Mosul and began bombing and killing.
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Petraeus was philosophical about Mosul's descent into chaos, which occurred mostly after he left to become head of training for the Iraqi Army in 2004. "Any army of liberation has a certain half-life before it becomes an army of occupation," he told a NEWSWEEK reporter at the time. There's an evolution to the way any army of liberation is seen—and there's nothing that can be done to stop changing perceptions.9 r; c# G7 Q+ R% p" E

! n$ D! e: I; Z: d6 _; PPetraeus is a resourceful, imaginative commander who has shown an ability to adapt to rude surprises. It may be that he is confident he can adjust to whatever the Iraq war throws at him—probably, intensified street fighting. But he will need to be creative, and he may need to do what generals do not like to do: tell the president that he's wrong, that Iraq cannot be won by more force, that the time has come to pull back. Even Petraeus's own strategy may have been overrun by events. "It's ironic," says one of the drafters of Petraeus's new counterinsurgency manual, who declined to be identified because he did not wish to irk his superiors. "We've finished the counterinsurgency manual just as Iraq looks like it's heading for civil war. We don't have a doctrine for that."

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Petraeus, right, with an Iraqi general

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