SECRET - STRICTLY
PERSONALFROM
: DAVID MANNING
DATE: 14 MARCH 2002
CC: JONATHAN POWELL
PRIME MINISTER
YOUR TRIP TO THE US
I had dinner with
Condi on Tuesday; and talks and lunch with her an NSC team
on Wednesday (to which Christopher Meyer also came). These
were good exchanges, and particularly frank when we were
one-on-one at dinner. I attach the records in case you want
to glance.
IRAQ
We spent a long
time at dinner on IRAQ. It is clear that Bush is grateful
for your support and has registered that you are getting
flak. I said that you would not budge in your support for
regime change but you had to manage a press, a Parliament
and a public opinion that was very different than anything
in the States. And you would not budge either in your
insistence that, if we pursued regime change, it must be
very carefully done and produce the right result. Failure
was not an option.
Condi’s enthusiasm
for regime change is undimmed. But there were some signs,
since we last spoke, of greater awareness of the practical
difficulties and political risks. (See the attached piece by
Seymour Hersh which Christopher Meyer says gives a pretty
accurate picture of the uncertain state of the debate in
Washington.)
From what she
said, Bush has yet to find the answers to the big questions:
- how to
persuade international opinion that military action against
Iraq is necessary and justified;
- what value to put on the exiled Iraqi opposition;
- how to coordinate a US/allied military campaign with
internal opposition (assuming there is any);
- what happens on the morning after?
Bush will want to
pick your brains. He will also want to hear whether he can
expect coalition support. I told Condi that we realised that
the Administration could go it alone if it chose. But if it
wanted company, it would have to take account of the
concerns of its potential coalition partners. In particular:
- the UN dimension.
The issue of the weapons inspectors must be handled in a way
that would persuade European and wider opinion that the US
was conscious of the international framework, and the
insistence of many countries on the need for a legal base.
Renwed refused [sic] by Saddam to accept unfettered
inspections would be a powerful argument;
- the paramount
importance of tackling Israel/Palestine. Unless we did, we
could find ourselves bombing Iraq and losing the Gulf.
YOUR VISIT TO THE
RANCH
No doubt we need to
keep a sense of perspective. But my talks with Condi
convinced me that Bush wants to hear your views on Iraq
before taking decisions. He also wants your support. He is
still smarting from the comments by other European leaders
on his Iraq policy.
This gives you real
influence: on the public relations strategy; on the UN and
weapons inspections; and on US planning for any military
campaign. This could be critically important. I think
there is a real risk that the Administration underestimates
the difficulties. They may agree that failure isn’t an
option, but this does not mean that they will avoid it.
Will the Sunni
majority really respond to an uprising led by Kurds and
Shias? Will Americans really put in enough ground troops to
do the job if the Kurdish/Shi’ite stratagem fails? Even
if they do will they be willing to take the sort of
casualties that the Republican Guard may inflict on them if
it turns out to be an urban war, and Iraqi troops don’t
conveniently collapse in a heap as Richard Perle and others
confidently predict? They need to answer these and other
tough questions, in a more convincing way than they have so
far before concluding that they can do the business.
The talks at the
ranch will also give you the chance to push Bush on the
Middle East. The Iraq factor means that there may never be a
better opportunity to get this Administration to give
sustained attention to reviving the MEPP.