What Iraqi Government? 0
As I drove to Paoli this morning, I was musing on how to address just this issue.
I come home to find that Andrew Sullivan beat me to it:
References to the Iraqi government in much of the discussion of what to do seems to assume that Iraq is an independent nation that petitioned the United States for assistance. Witness this discussion on Here and Now. (The portion involving Richard Perle is particulary interesting.)
Yet, the Iraqi government is the creation–an unruly creation, perhaps, and obviously an impotent one–of the Current Federal Administration.
And, frankly, the Current Federal Administration blew it.
Big time.
And keeps looking for some way to get out of the quicksand without admitting that it ever stepped in quicksand to begin with, let alone charged into it full tilt with guns a-blazin’ even as by-standers shouted out warnings.
Meanwhile, Professor Cole weighs in on the merits of the Bushite plan:
But is that really the big problem in Iraq? Bush is thinking in terms of a conventional war, where armies fight to hold territory. But if a nimble guerrilla group can come out at night and set off a bomb at the base of a large tenement building in a Shiite neighborhood, they can keep the sectarian civil war going. They work by provoking reprisals. They like to hold territory if they can. But as we saw with Fallujah and Tal Afar, if they cannot they just scatter and blow things up elsewhere.
And the main problem is not “al-Qaeda,” which is small and probably not that important, and anyway is not really Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda. They are just Salafi jihadis who appropriated the name. When their leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was killed, it didn’t cause the insurgency to miss a beat. Conclusion: “al-Qaeda” is not central to the struggle. Izzat Ibrahim Duri and the Baath Party are probably the center of gravity of the resistance.
How many more lives get sacrified to delusion?
Dick Polman thinks he has the answer
In other words, lots more will die for a lie.