The Iraq War History 410/510 CRN 42159/42160 Summer 2008 (7/21-8/13)

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The Iraq War History 410/510 CRN 42159/42160 Summer 2008 (7/21-8/13) MTWR 10-11:50 146 Straub Professor Dracobly MCK 329 Phone: 346-5910 E-mail: dracobly@uoregon.edu Office hours: Thursday 1-2:30; most days after class; or by appointment Aims of course The Iraq War? But that s not history, is it? That is the response I often get when I tell people that I ll be teaching Iraq this summer. It is true that the war has not yet ended but while it remains difficult to tell the story of some aspects of the war, other aspects have come into a tolerable degree of focus. The central aim of this course is to make some sense of 1) the U.S. administration s decision to invade Iraq (how did it arrive at the decision? When? What the process? What were the administration s aims? How did it hope to achieve them?); and 2) the subsequent course events, from the first two years following the removal of Saddam Hussein from power and beyond. What of all this might we consider history? Which parts can now be told as history? Which parts cannot? Are there aspects of the war about which something of a consensus is likely to emerge? Are there aspects likely to remain controversial for the foreseeable future? Which ones and why? Those are a few of the questions I hope to examine this quarter. The central organizing principle of the course, however, is much simpler. The central argument is that the war is about much more than U.S. aims and actions and that any account of the course of the war must take into account Iraqi (and other) perspectives. The course is thus organized around two books, one focusing primarily on the U.S. as the prime agent in the war (Thomas Ricks, Fiasco), the other focusing primarily on Iraqi experiences and responses to the U.S. invasion (Anthony Shadid, Night Draws Near). Assignments and expectations Attendance and fulfillment of course assignments is expected.

In addition to two in-class quizzes on assigned material, there will be short (five pages or so) paper based on an outside source and a (short) final exam. I will issue a guideline for the paper shortly. Grades will be compiled as follows: Quizzes (two): 15% each Final: 30% (August 14, 10:15, in our classroom) Paper: 30% (due anytime before 5:00 pm August 19) Class participation and presence: 10% or my discretion (for those who really cannot speak in class, I may reduce this part of the grade at my discretion) Schedule of readings: all readings in addition to Ricks and Shadid can be found on the class Blackboard site under Extra Reading Materials. Anything listed after Also is optional. All else is required. Week 1 July 21: Introduction July 22: Decisions Ricks, Fiasco, 3-57; and President Bush, West Point address, June 1, 2002. Also: the implications of the new national security policy are explained by one of its critics in Richard Falk, The New Bush Doctrine, The Nation, July 15, 2002; for a sense of neo-conservative positions, see Kagan and Kristol, What to Do about Iraq, Weekly Standard, January 21, 2002. July 23: Planning for war Ricks, Fiasco, 58-111 Also: the administration and Defense were repeatedly warned about the failure to prepare for the occupation. For an example, see the report authored by Conrad C. Crane and W. Andrew Terrill of the U.S. Army War College s Strategic Studies Institute, Reconstructing Iraq: Insights, Challenges and Missions for Military Forces in a Post- Conflict Scenario, February 2003. July 24: The view from Iraq

Shadid, Night, 1-56; and Saddam s Delusions: The View from the Inside (this second is an examination of the Iraqi leadership s views on the eve of the war. Simply unreal: must be read to be believed) Week 2 July 28: The invasion Ricks, Fiasco, 115-148; Shadid, Night, 59-150 Also: at any point this week you might take a look at the materials in the Early Analyses folder: especially Results in Iraq: 100 Days Toward Security and Freedom, August 8, 2003; Secretary Rumsfeld s and General Franks July, 2003 appearance before the Senate Armed Services Committee is also interesting. As for the rest of the materials in the file: Max Boot is a historian/military analyst associated with neo-conservative circles; Stephen Biddle and Anthony Cordesman are among the most prominent military analysts/strategists in the U.S.; the Williamson Murray and Robert Scales piece is an excerpt from an early official history of the invasion. July 29: The aftermath Shadid, Night, 153-231 July 30: The CPA Ricks, Fiasco, 149-213 July 31: The occupation Shadid, Night, 235-329 Week 3 August 4: Getting Tough Ricks, Fiasco, 214-297

August 5: Insurgents Shadid, Nights, 333-396 August 6: Taking stock Ricks, Fiasco, 302-362 August 7: More insurgents Shadid, Nights, 397-465 Week 4 August 11: Where things stood, January, 2005 Ricks, Fiasco, 363-429; Shadid, Night, 467-476 August 12: Conditions resembling civil war The Next Iraqi War? Sectarianism and Civil Conflict, International Crisis Group, 27 February 2006; and selections from In Their Own Words: Reading the Iraqi Insurgency, International Crisis Group, 15 February 2006. I have posted pdf copies of these reports on the course Blackboard site. Both documents are also available from the International Crisis Group webpage (which is worth perusing. You can find some images of the materials used for In Their Own Words, on the site.) Also: if you want some grim humor: Nearly 21 Million Iraqis Not Yet Killed, Avant News, Sept. 13, 2006. August 13: The surge I have posted a number of items on the Blackboard site. We can make a final selection later but the provisional reading is selections from: Frederick Kagan and Michael O Hanlon, Choosing Victory: A Plan for Success in Iraq, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, Brookings Institute, January 2007December 21, 2006; Daniel L. Byman and Kenneth M. Pollack, Things Fall Apart: Containing the Spillover from an Iraqi Civil War, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, Brookings Institute, January 2007; Michael O Hanlon and Jason H. Campbell, The Road Ahead: Progress and

Challenges in Iraq, Harvard international Review, Spring 2008; Bruce Riedel, Iraq: Winnters and Losers at Five Years, July 14, 2008; Michael Massing, Embedded in Iraq, New York Review of Books July 17, 2008; the Iraq Body Count and the latest Iraq Index update from the Brookings Institute. Some of you might want to peruse the blog of Iraqi journalists at: http://washingtonbureau.typepad.com/iraq/ I have also posted links to an American Enterprise Institute conference, The Way Ahead, and a response posted on Salon.com (in all truth, the former especially is repetitive of the other materials posted under the names of Kagan, O Hanlon and Pollack). August 14: Final exam 10:15, in our classroom. Bring a blue/green book (available in Bookstore)