US has priorities wrong in targeting Iraq, says general who freed Kosovo

US: This may be for the US a war worth fighting, but the country has still not had a sufficiently broad national debate on the…

US: This may be for the US a war worth fighting, but the country has still not had a sufficiently broad national debate on the issues, writes Washington Post columnist David Ignatius

As the countdown continues toward war against Iraq, it's worth listening one last time to the arguments against that conflict, as laid out this week by one of America's most distinguished retired generals, Wesley K. Clark.

My gut tells me that this is a war worth fighting, but I'm bothered that America still hasn't had the kind of broad national debate that would provide a solid foundation of public support for US troops.

So when a former NATO commander, the man who led the 1999 war that rescued Kosovo from Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic, tells me he's worried about US policy on Iraq, I pay attention. The other thing that makes Clark's views interesting is that he's increasingly mentioned as a possible Democratic presidential candidate.

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Clark (58), only two years into retirement from the US army, clearly feels ambivalent these days, far more so than last fall when he first began criticising the administration's Iraq policy. He doesn't want to second-guess President Bush on the eve of battle.

"I've told all the Europeans they need to get on the team," he explains. "It's better to be inside the tent than outside." If war does come, he says, "my heart is with the men and women who will fight. I want them to be successful."

Clark's argument, in simple terms, is that unless the United States can bring a strong coalition into a war against Iraq, it may put itself in greater danger. The chief threat to US security now is al- Qaeda, he argues. Disarming Iraq is important too, he says, but it's not the most urgent task.

The Bush administration's mistake in Iraq, he says, is one of priorities. "They picked war over law. They picked a unilateralist approach over a multilateral approach. They picked conventional forces over special-operations forces. And they picked Saddam Hussein as a target over Osama bin Laden."

Clark worries that the Iraq policy is fatally flawed because it is likely to create new recruits for America's main enemy - the Islamic fundamentalists who attacked New York and the Pentagon on September 11th, 2001.

He recalls a military dictum from his days as commander of the Army's National Training Centre: "There are only two kinds of plans - ones that might work and ones that won't work. You have to avoid a plan with a fatal flaw."

The key to NATO's success in Kosovo, Clark says, was that the United States maintained a strong coalition of allies, even at the cost of delay and political bickering in European capitals and Washington.

He doesn't doubt that overwhelming US military power will quickly crush Saddam Hussein's relatively weak forces. Indeed, he gave a dazzling briefing for global leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos this week about how US-led forces will move toward Baghdad.

His concern, instead, is about what comes after - "the unpredictability of consequences", as he puts it. He fears that the new dangers spawned by the war in Iraq might outweigh any gains from disarming Saddam Hussein.

Clark cites three litmus tests that the administration must meet before going to war. "First, are you sure you won't destroy the international institutions you say you are supporting and thereby undermine the war against terror?

"Second, can you win the war quickly and smoothly, avoiding the collateral damage that would make you lose while winning? And third, in the aftermath, can you prevent the growth of al- Qaeda and control the weapons of mass destruction that may be hidden?" If the Bush administration can answer Yes to all three, then the Iraq war will succeed, Clark says. But he isn't convinced.

Clark talks with a politician's passion and he certainly was making the rounds at Davos like a man who is pondering a campaign. He says he supports many aspects of former President Clinton's economic policy, especially "the basic policy of trying to reduce public sector debt, which produced a lot of confidence in financial communities around the world."

What separates Clark from both Clinton and Bush is that he has seen the face of war close up. He went to Vietnam in 1969 and came home the next year on a stretcher. "The mission was to find the enemy and I was successful," he says.

Clark insists he is not a presidential candidate. All such political questions, he insists, lie "over the hump" of the looming war in Iraq.