• Research
  • About
  • Experts
Carnegie India logoCarnegie lettermark logo
AI
REQUIRED IMAGE

REQUIRED IMAGE

Article

We Are Losing the War In Iraq


Every major military indicator shows the war in Iraq is going badly. The United States is losing ground, losing hearts and minds, and losing the war. Every day this month, on average, three U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq. This is up from the death rate in August, which was up from July's toll. Major cities are now considered too unsafe for U.S. forces to enter. Washington officials insist Iraqi elections will take place as planned in January 2005, but officials in Baghdad are more pessimistic. "We are in deep trouble in Iraq," warned Republican Senator Chuck Hagel last Sunday. And this, according to a new intelligence assessment, is the best case.


Link Copied
Published on Sep 21, 2004

Every major military indicator shows the war in Iraq is going badly. The United States is losing ground, losing hearts and minds, and losing the war. Every day this month, on average, three U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq. This is up from the death rate from August, which was up from July's toll. Major cities are now considered too unsafe for U.S. forces to enter, including Fallujah, Samarra, Ramadi and other cities in Iraq’s Sunni regions. The Shia populated urban areas are not—for the moment—in open revolt, but it is difficult to find large cities outside the Kurdish regions where U.S. forces have effective control, including large sections of Baghdad. Time magazine reported this week that insurgents loyal to Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, the most wanted terrorist in Iraq, are patrolling one of Baghdad’s major thoroughfares—within mortar range of the U.S. embassy. Washington officials insist Iraqi elections will take place as planned in January 2005, but officials in Baghdad are more pessimistic. "We are in deep trouble in Iraq," warned Republican Senator Chuck Hagel last Sunday.

Reconstruction projects critical to improving the daily lives of Iraqis never took off at the rate promised by administration officials and now are stalled. A senior Iraqi official with the Baghdad Ministry of Public Works complained to the New York Times, "For a year we have been talking, with beautiful PowerPoint documents, but without a drop of water." Little has been actually built and the prospects for turn around are poor. The administration request to transfer $3.4 billion to security forces from the $18 billion Congress allocated for reconstruction means that many projects will be cancelled. Baghdad officials say their water and sewage budgets will be cut in half, for example. This is on top of the already dismal record. Of the 100 projects the U.S. originally planned, they say, only four are scheduled to start by the end of the year.

And this, according to a new intelligence assessment, is the best case. The new National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq--the first since the notoriously flawed October 2002 NIE that found weapons where there were none--has not been publicly released. It should be. The October 2002 NIE was quickly printed as a public document when it served the administration's interest in winning votes for the resolution authorizing the use of force. This new estimate details three most likely scenarios for Iraq. The worst is all-out civil war, according to officials who spoke to reporters anonymously. The public has a right to know what our intelligence officials are predicting. They can then better judge whom to believe and what policies need to be changed.

The plan Senator John Kerry detailed September 20 offers a solid, reasonable approach for salvaging the situation. Whoever is president should pursue this plan to internationalize the security responsibilities and efforts to build democracy in Iraq, get serious about training Iraqi forces and implement high visibility, quick impact reconstruction projects (including giving Iraqis the contracts). The strongest argument in favor of this approach is that sentiment is growing for a dramatic shift in policy that may give the nation one last chance to win. Judging from the comments of leading Republicans over the past few days, there is widespread concern about the deteriorating situation in Iraq and there may be the basis for forging a new bipartisan approach along the goals outlined by Kerry.

The strongest argument against the Kerry approach is that it may be too late. There may not be a solution to Iraq. There have been so many profound mistakes, starting with the decision to launch this war against a weapons threat that did not exist, that it may not be possible to salvage the situation. The U.S. cannot cut and run, but neither is it wise to simply stay and die. Officials should start planning for a careful, safe withdrawal, almost certainly on a timetable considerably faster than the four years Kerry suggests.

This is not a reflection on the performance of U.S. troops or military leadership. As Cornwallis learned at Yorktown, Napoleon at Moscow and Hitler at Stalingrad, sometimes the best generals, the best troops and the best weapons cannot compensate for deeply flawed strategic vision.

United StatesIraqForeign PolicyNuclear PolicyNuclear Energy

Carnegie India does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

More Work from Carnegie India

  • Article
    Managing Divergence: India’s BRICS Presidency in 2026

    This piece argues that India’s central challenge is not managing a single flashpoint but resolving the underlying tension between expansion and institutional coherency of the BRICS grouping.

      Vrinda Sahai

  • Article
    India–Africa Strategic Partnership: Challenges, Potential, and Possible Pathways

    A partnership between India, a country of subcontinental size, and Africa, a continent of fifty-four countries, may seem asymmetric until one notes that both are home to nearly the same number of people—1.4 billion. This essay spells out the existing challenges to the partnership, its optimal potential, and the possible pathways to realize it over the next quarter-century.

      Rajiv Bhatia

  • Commentary
    The Unresolved Challenges in U.S.–India Semiconductor Cooperation

    The U.S.–India semiconductor cooperation story is well-stocked with top-level strategic intent. What remains unresolved, however, are some underlying challenges that will determine whether the cooperation actually functions. Three such friction points stand out.

      Shruti Mittal

  • Commentary
    Emerging From the “Zombie State” of Trade Agreements: The India-EU FTA

    The India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is shaping up to be one of the most consequential trade negotiations, both economically and strategically. But, what’s in the agreement, what’s missing, and what will determine its success in the years ahead

      Vrinda Sahai, Nicolas Köhler-Suzuki

  • India and a Changing Global Order: Foreign Policy in the Trump 2.0 Era
    Research
    India and a Changing Global Order: Foreign Policy in the Trump 2.0 Era

    Trump 2.0 has unsettled India’s external environment—but has not overturned its foreign policy strategy, which continues to rely on diversification, hedging, and calibrated partnerships across a fractured order.

      • Sameer Lalwani
      • +6

      Milan Vaishnav, ed., Sameer Lalwani, Tanvi Madan, …

Get more news and analysis from
Carnegie India
Carnegie India logo, white
Unit C-4, 5, 6, EdenparkShaheed Jeet Singh MargNew Delhi – 110016, IndiaPhone: 011-40078687
  • Research
  • About
  • Experts
  • Projects
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Careers
  • Privacy
  • For Media
Get more news and analysis from
Carnegie India
© 2026 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. All rights reserved.