Camp Arifjan in the desert kingdom of Kuwait,
America's depot to the Iraq war, feels about as far
away as you can get from South Carolina, Super
Tuesday and the election-year squabbles back home.
And George W. Bush, who is currently midway through
his six-nation tour of the Mideast, is doing a good
job of distancing himself from the politics of 2008.
But as Bush rallied U.S. troops at the base here on
Saturday with a "Hoo-ah" and conferred with his Iraq
dream team, Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan
Crocker, he indicated that he was setting in motion
policies that could dramatically affect the
presidential race--and any decisions the next
president makes in 2009.
In remarks to the
traveling press, delivered from the Third Army
operation command center here, Bush said that
negotiations were about to begin on a long-term
strategic partnership with the Iraqi government
modeled on the accords the United States has with
Kuwait and many other countries. Crocker, who flew
in from Baghdad with Petraeus to meet with the
president, elaborated: "We're putting our team
together now, making preparations in Washington," he
told reporters. "The Iraqis are doing the same. And
in the few weeks ahead, we would expect to get
together to start this negotiating process." The
target date for concluding the agreement is July,
says Gen. Doug Lute, Bush's Iraq coordinator in the
White House--in other words, just in time for the
Democratic and Republican national conventions.
Most significant of all, the new partnership deal
with Iraq, including a status of forces agreement
that would then replace the existing Security
Council mandate authorizing the presence of the
U.S.-led multinational forces in Iraq, will become a
sworn obligation for the next president. It will
become just another piece of the complex global
security framework involving a hundred or so
countries with which Washington now has bilateral
defense or security cooperation agreements. Last
month, Sen. Hillary Clinton urged Bush not to commit
to any such agreement without congressional
approval. The president said nothing about that on
Saturday, but Lute said last fall that the Iraqi
agreement would not likely rise to the level of a
formal treaty requiring Senate ratification. Even
so, it would be difficult if not impossible for
future presidents to unilaterally breach such a
pact.
As far as the number of U.S. troops that would
remain in Iraq under such a pact, the administration
is considering changes that could also pre-empt
anything the Democrats have in mind. Gen. Petraeus
told reporters that he and Pentagon planners were
also working on a new "intellectual construct" for a
U.S. troop presence in Iraq beyond the planned
withdrawal of five brigade combat teams, two Marine
battalions and the Marine Expeditionary Unit by the
end of July. "We're going to continue to play with
this, if you will," Petraeus said. "We literally
meet a couple of times a week and keep working this
along." Asked whether he and the Pentagon were
considering a larger drawdown than the current
one--which would shrink the U.S. presence to a
pre-surge level of about 130,000, he added:
"Certainly there is a possibility of that." In fact,
one Pentagon contractor who is working on the
long-term U.S. plans for Iraq says that the
administration is considering new configurations of
forces that could reduce troop levels to well under
100,000, perhaps to as few as 60,000, by the time
the next president takes office.
The upshot is that the next president, Democrat
or Republican, is likely to be handed a fait
accompli that could well render moot his or her own
elaborate withdrawal plans, especially the ones
being considered by the two leading Democratic
contenders, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Obama,
undeterred by the reported success of Bush's surge,
is pushing ahead with his plans for a
brigade-a-month withdrawals that would remove the
U.S. military presence entirely. If current Defense
Secretary Robert Gates can draw down to, say, 12
brigades by 2009, a senior Obama adviser told me
Friday, "then we can get the rest out in eight to 10
months."
But Bush may have the upper hand now. The
president touted the surge's success on Saturday,
and he reiterated that "long-term success will
require active U.S. engagement that outlasts my
presidency." The "enduring relationship" he is
building with Iraq, Bush added, "will have
diplomatic, economic and security
components--similar to relationships we have with
Kuwait and other nations in this region and around
the world." Some of those relationships have now
lasted decades. And as in Japan, Germany, Korea and
Kuwait, they include a substantial troop presence.
Far away in the Persian Gulf, Bush is creating facts
on the ground that the next president may not be
able to ignore.