Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Top Ten Myths about Iraq in 2005

Iraq has unfortunately become a football in the rough and ready, two-party American political arena, generating large numbers of sound bites and so much spin you could clothe all of China in the resulting threads.

Here are what I think are the top ten myths about Iraq, that one sees in print or on television in the United States.

1. The guerrilla war is being waged only in four provinces. This canard is trotted out by everyone from think tank flacks to US generals, and it is shameful. Iraq has 18 provinces, but some of them are lightly populated. The most populous province is Baghdad, which has some 6 million residents, or nearly one-fourth of the entire population of the country. It also contains the capital. It is one of the four being mentioned!. Another of the four, Ninevah province, has a population of some 1.8 million and contains Mosul, a city of over a million and the country's third largest! It is not clear what other two provinces are being referred to, but they are probably Salahuddin and Anbar provinces, other big centers of guerrilla activity, bringing the total for the "only four provinces" to something like 10 million of Iraq's 26 million people.

But the "four provinces" allegation is misleading on another level. It is simply false. Guerrilla attacks occur routinely beyond the confines of Anbar, Salahuddin, Ninevah and Baghdad. Diyala province is a big center of the guerrilla movement and has witnessed thousands of deaths in the ongoing unconventional war. Babil province just south of Baghdad is a major center of back alley warfare between Sunnis and Shiites and attacks on Coalition troops. Attacks, assassinations and bombings are routine in Kirkuk province in the north, a volatile mixture of Kurds, Turkmen and Arabs engaged in a subterranean battle for dominance of the area's oil fields. So that is 7 provinces, and certainly half the population of the country lives in these 7, which are daily affected by the ongoing violence. It is true that violence is rare in the 3 northern provinces of the Kurdistan confederacy. And the Shiite south is much less violent than the 7 provinces of the center-north, on a good day. But some of this calm in the south is an illusion deriving from poor on the ground reporting. It appears to be the case that British troops are engaged in an ongoing struggle with guerrilla forces of the Marsh Arabs in Maysan Province. Even calm is not always a good sign. The southern port city of Basra appears to come by its via a reign of terror by Shiite religious militias.

2. Iraqi Sunnis voting in the December 15 election is a sign that they are being drawn into the political process and might give up the armed insurgency So far Iraqi Sunni parties are rejecting the outcome of the election and threatening to boycott parliament. Some 20,000 of them demonstrated all over the center-north last Friday against what they saw as fraudulent elections. So, they haven't been drawn into the political process in any meaningful sense. And even if they were, it would not prevent them from pursuing a two-track policy of both political representation and guerrilla war. The two-track approach is common among insurgencies, from Northern Ireland's IRA to Palestine's Hamas.

3. The guerrillas are winning the war against US forces. The guerrillas are really no more than mosquitos to US forces. The casualties they have inflicted on the US military, of over 2000 dead and some 15,000 wounded, are deeply regrettable and no one should make light of them. But this level of insurgency could never defeat the US military in the field.

4. Iraqis are grateful for the US presence and want US forces there to help them build their country. Opinion polls show that between 66% and 80% of Iraqis want the US out of Iraq on a short timetable. Already in the last parliament, some 120 parliamentarians out of 275 supported a resolution demanding a timetable for US withdrawal, and that sentiment will be much stronger in the newly elected parliament.

5. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, born in Iran in 1930, is close to the Iranian regime in Tehran Sistani, the spiritual leader of Iraq's majority Shiite community, is an almost lifetime expatriate. He came to Iraq late in 1951, and is far more Iraqi than Arnold Schwarzenegger is Californian. Sistani was a disciple of Grand Ayatollah Burujirdi in Iran, who argued against clerical involvement in day to day politics. Sistani rejects Khomeinism, and would be in jail if he were living in Iran, as a result. He has been implicitly critical of Iran's poor human rights record, and has himself spoken eloquently in favor of democracy and pluralism. Ma'd Fayyad reported in Al-Sharq al-Awsat in August of 2004 that when Sistani had heart problems, an Iranian representative in Najaf visited him. He offered Sistani the best health care Tehran hospitals could provide, and asked if he could do anything for the grand ayatollah. Sistani is said to have responded that what Iran could do for Iraq was to avoid intervening in its internal affairs. And then Sistani flew off to London for his operation, an obvious slap in the face to Iran's Supreme Jurisprudent Ali Khamenei.

6. There is a silent majority of middle class, secular-minded Iraqis who reject religious fundamentalism. Two major elections have been held. For all their flaws (lack of security, anonymity of most candidates, constraints on campaigning), they certainly are weather vanes of the political mood of most of the country. While the Kurdistan Alliance is largely secular, the Arab Iraqis have turned decisively toward religious fundamentalist parties. The United Iraqi Alliance (Shiite fundamentalists) and the Iraqi Accord Front (Sunni fundamentalists) are the big winners of the most recent election. Iyad Allawi's secular Iraqiya list got only 14.5 percent of the seats on Jan. 30, and will shrink to half that, most likely, in this most recent election. A clear majority of Iraqis, and the vast majority of the Arab Iraqis, are constructing new, fluid political identities that depend heavily on religious and ethnic sub-nationalisms.

7. The new Iraqi constitution is a victory for Western, liberal values in the Middle East. The constitution made Islam the religion of state. It stipulates that the civil parliament may pass no legislation that contradicts the established laws of Islam. It looks forward to clerics serving on court benches. It allows individuals to opt out of secular, civil personal status laws (for marriage, divorce, alimony, inheritance) and to choose relgious canon law instead. Islamic law gives girls, e.g., only half the amount of inheritance received by their brothers. Instead of a federal government, the constitution establishes a loose supervisory role for Baghdad and devolves most powers, including claims on future oil finds, on provinces and provincial confederacies, such that it is difficult to see how the country will be able to hold together.

8. Iraq is already in a civil war, so it does not matter if the US simply withdraws precipitately, since the situation is as bad as it can get. No, it isn't. During the course of the guerrilla war, the daily number of dead has fluctuated, between about 20 and about 60. But in a real civil war, it could easily be 10 times that. Some estimates of the number of Afghans killed during their long set of civil wars put the number at 2.5 million, along with 5 million displaced abroad and more millions displaced internally. Iraq is Malibu Beach compared to Afghanistan in its darkest hours. The US has a responsibility to get out of Iraq responsibly and to not allow it to fall into that kind of genocidal civil conflict.

9. The US can buy off the Iraqis now supporting guerrilla action against US troops. US military and civilian officials in Iraq have on numerous occasions alleged in the press or privately to me that a vast infusion of billions of dollars from the US would dampen down the guerrilla insurgency. In fact, it seems clear that far more Sunni Arabs support the guerrilla movement today than supported it in September of 2004, and more supported it in September of 2004 than had in September of 2003. AP reports that the US has spent $100 million on reconstruction projects in Diyala Province. These community development and infrastructural improvements, often carried out by US troops in conditions of danger, are most praiseworthy. But Diyala is a mess politically and a major center of guerrilla activity (see below), which simply could not be pursued on this scale without substantial local popular support. The Sunni Arab parties, which demand US withdrawal and reject the results of the Dec. 15 elections, carried the province, winning 6 seats.

The guerrillas are to some important extent driven by local nationalism and rejection of foreign occupation, as well as resentment at the marginalization of the Sunni Arab community in the new Iraq. They have a keen sense of national honor, and there is no evidence that they can be bribed into laying down their arms, or that the general populace can be bribed on any significant scale into turning the guerrillas in to the US. Attributing motives of honor to one's own side and crass economic interests to one's opponent is a common ploy of political propaganda, but we should be careful about believing our own spin.

Even a simple economic calculation would favor the guerrillas fighting on, however. If they could get back in control of Iraq through a coup, they'd have $50 billion a year in oil revenues to play with. The total US reconstruction aid promised to Iraq is only $18 billion, and much of that will be spent on security-- i.e. it won't benefit most Iraqis.

10. The Bush administration wanted free elections in Iraq. This allegation is simply not true, as I and others pointed out last January. I said then, and it is still true:


' Moreover, as Swopa rightly reminds us all, the Bush administration opposed one-person, one-vote elections of this sort. First they were going to turn Iraq over to Chalabi within six months. Then Bremer was going to be MacArthur in Baghdad for years. Then on November 15, 2003, Bremer announced a plan to have council-based elections in May of 2004. The US and the UK had somehow massaged into being provincial and municipal governing councils, the members of which were pro-American. Bremer was going to restrict the electorate to this small, elite group.

Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani immediately gave a fatwa denouncing this plan and demanding free elections mandated by a UN Security Council resolution. Bush was reportedly "extremely offended" at these two demands and opposed Sistani. Bremer got his appointed Interim Governing Council to go along in fighting Sistani. Sistani then brought thousands of protesters into the streets in January of 2004, demanding free elections. Soon thereafter, Bush caved and gave the ayatollah everything he demanded. Except that he was apparently afraid that open, non-manipulated elections in Iraq might become a factor in the US presidential campaign, so he got the elections postponed to January 2005. This enormous delay allowed the country to fall into much worse chaos, and Sistani is still bitter that the Americans didn't hold the elections last May. The US objected that they couldn't use UN food ration cards for registration, as Sistani suggested. But in the end that is exactly what they did. '


Iraq's situation is extremely complex. It is not a black and white poster for an American political party. Good things and bad things are happening there. The American public cannot help make good policy, however, unless the myths are first dispelled.

19 Comments:

At 10:23 AM, Blogger BarfUser said...

It's very difficult to see through the lies, distortions, wishful thinking, and delusions of the moment. Thank you for a balanced and coherent analysis of this. Like so many complicated situations, there is no one single right answer.

 
At 10:35 AM, Blogger Ranando said...

Well Done.

 
At 11:04 AM, Blogger ploeg said...

All well and good. I would, however, challenge that "The guerrillas are winning the war against US forces" is a myth worth mentioning. It is readily apparent to all that the guerillas are not winning in a conventional sense and (as you say) cannot win in a convensional sense, at the insurgency's current level. It is not so obvious that the insurgency will continue at the current level. Nor is it obvious that we will continue to be able to replace the losses that we are incurring.

A much more pernicious myth is that we can stay in Iraq indefinitely. This assumption is commonly made by adherents of the "You broke it, you fix it" doctrine. These people seem to take it for granted that the best and brightest Americans will continue to go to Iraq for as many tours as necessary to make things right, risking divorce and financial ruin along the way. These people also seem to believe, contrary to evidence and common sense, that the Iraqi people will endure a decade-long occupation by U.S. forces. We, in fact, do not have an unlimited amount of time to spend in Iraq to "fix it". We will be lucky to have two more years. Depending on how the Iraqi government forms and on Sistani's longetivity, we may have as few as two to six more months.

 
At 11:21 AM, Blogger Pauly said...

Regarding your article on myths about Iraq. I always thought it was odd that the Bush administration (all of a sudden) wanted free elections in Iraq. It didn't make any sense to me at the time knowing the potential for fundamentalism in the region. Thanks for shedding light on some history I may have overlooked.

Paul Thompson
pauly@casperboo.com
http://csperboohope.blogspot.com/

 
At 11:32 AM, Blogger Stone Riley said...

Good article. However, I wish you had ventured an opinion on John Murtha's argument. Are the U.S. ground forces nearly "broken"?

 
At 12:24 PM, Blogger The Heretik said...

Thanks for the continuing insights. Stop by here at least once a day. Keep up the fine work.

 
At 3:27 PM, Blogger Nindid said...

Prof. Cole,

I wanted to ask you a question regarding your third myth “The guerrillas are winning the war against US forces.” You go on to argue that the guerillas simply are not militarily capable of beating the US forces in open conflict.

This is surely correct, but is anyone actually arguing it is the case? Perhaps there are outliers, but it seems to me that the vast majority who express the idea that the guerillas are winning do not do so on the basis of their ability to take on the US military one to one.

The arguments as I understand them say that:

1) The US missed whatever opportunity for ‘victory’ it might have had by bungling the economic reconstruction and political stabilization of Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the invasion.
2) The US military’s efforts at combating the Iraqi insurgency have proven to create as many new ‘terrorists’ as they are likely to kill or capture.

The argument that the ‘guerrillas are winning the war’ hinges on the fact that they absolutely do not have to win in open battle to defeat us. Isn’t that the entire nature of asymmetrical warfare?

I appreciate your efforts to return the public discourse on Iraq to something resembling a factual debate, though I fear that is impossible in the current climate outside of the academy.

 
At 4:12 PM, Blogger Steve said...

Dr. Cole,
You make some great points, but I think that your point about the insurgency not being able to defeat U.S. forces is missing the mark. I doubt anyone thinks that the U.S. will be forced to surrender to the insurgency. However, if the U.S. is forced out of the country due to their inability to gain any ground there, while still taking significant casualties (2,000 + dead and 15,000 + injured is quite significant), then they will eventually have to give up and leave the country. In fact, this seems inevitable and obvious to anyone but George W Bush. In that sense, the insurgency will have won, just as the Viet Cong won when they forced the U.S. to withdraw from Vietnam. I don't see any way that the U.S. can withdraw from Iraq and try to say that they didn't lose. Keeping the troops in Iraq is only delaying the inevitable, which is really all Bush is trying to do.

 
At 9:26 PM, Blogger jurassicpork said...

Another myth is that the Bush Madministration is overtly trying to include the Sunnis in the democratic process, which is anything but the truth. The Bushies do not want a return to power the Sunnis who still think that Saddam is their real President. Bush and his gang of closet incompetents would rather see a Clinton return to the White House than see that happen.

 
At 10:02 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

I don't think the success or failure of the guerrilla insurgency can be measured by the number of U.S. troops killed or wounded - their real success is that they have terrified and frustrated the allied forces in Iraq and have managed to stop the exploitation of Iraqi resources that the U.S. badly needs to start in order to fund the war... So far, the war has only profited pro-Bush U.S. corporations, but has not generated Iraqi revenues to support military operations in the theater…

As far as links between Iran and Iraqi Shiite are concerned I think the matter boils down to who they like and support least - on that list the U.S. is much more disliked than Iran...

Also, with Mossad now putting pressure by speculating regarding an Iranian nuclear bomb in two years, it should be assessed as to how Iraqi Shiite would respond to an Israeli or U.S. or ‘other’ or ‘unknown’ military strike on Iran... I am sure the Iraqi Shiite will not sit idle if Iran is attacked...

And regarding the question of the “silent majority” - I have always found that to be a factor of where people look for the majority… The news media repeatedly makes this claim in Iran where it sees the urban and upper-middle class youth population as being resistant to religious conservatives… But the urban upper middle class Iranian youth are not the silent majority – and I doubt the news media get to travel to smaller towns and villages and interview the rural or lower middle class youth… The same is also true for Iraq, as you have pointed out in your analysis of the polls.

Let me know if you, or any of the readers, think different.

 
At 11:00 PM, Blogger InplainviewMonitor said...

#1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9 – perfect expert analysis, must know for anybody interested in the subject. It is really hard to discuss ME and Iraq without understanding this!

IMO, #3, 4, 10 are conceptual problems, not much to do with the concrete region. Once we know that there is advanced guerilla conflict in a country and its neighbors are involved, discussion of winning / losing becomes irrelevant. Simple loss – victory scale is hardly applicable in this situation.

When social groups rather than individuals are main players, poll numbers can’t replace concrete analysis of participants and their relationships. “Free elections” - what is this supposed to mean on the ground? Anything close to fair Western elections is impossible in occupied colony anyway.

#8 – well… hmmm…

 
At 12:17 PM, Blogger sherm said...

Re point #3. Consider the "tag team match scenario" Right now the US military is in the ring with the insurgents. We are not wiping them out but we are keeping them weak via military sweeps, mass arrests, and arms confiscation. The insurgents only need a handful incidents a day, carried out by a few dozen or so operatives, to keep the chaos alive.

Meanwhile our tag team partners, the Iraqi military, police, and militias are bulking up outside the ring with our enthusiastic help. When we make the tag the insurgents will be weak from the constant bludgeoning we give them, and out partners will number in the hundreds of thousands of well armed (for fighting insugernts) vengeful, violence friendly troops, all of whoom know the language and customs of their enemies.

I don't think the insurgents will stand a chance against the bulked up force they will be facing. They will face a force fighting for Shiite/Kurd dominance, not for some abstact (and self-serving) US goals. The insurgency will be bundled with the overall objective of subjigation of the Sunnis.

Another point to consider is that our military carries huge overhead. The number of combat soldiers is far smaller than the total force in the country. The Iraqi forces have much less overhead so their numbers are more potent than they appear.

 
At 7:19 PM, Blogger InplainviewMonitor said...

Myth #0: Technomagic is omnipotent

Technomagic is one of the core neoconservative beliefs. They believe that futuristic military technology gives those who control it a huge strategic advantage in the ME and globally. But Dr.Drayton is 100% right - it cannot and does not work this way!

1. GU. Richard Drayton. Shock, awe and Hobbes have backfired on America's neocons

The tragic irony of the 21st century is that just as faith in technology collapsed on the world's stock markets in 2000, it came to power in the White House and Pentagon. For the Project for a New American Century's ambition of "full-spectrum dominance" - in which its country could "fight and win multiple, simultaneous major-theatre wars" - was a monster borne up by the high tide of techno euphoria of the 1990s.

Lieutenant Colonel Ralph Peters advised on "future warfare" at the Army War College - prophesying in 1997 a coming "age of constant conflict". Thomas Barnett at the Naval War College assisted Vice-Admiral Cebrowski in developing "network-centric warfare". General
John Jumper of the air force predicted a planet easily mastered from air and space. American forces would win everywhere because they enjoyed what was unashamedly called the "God's-eye" view of satellites and GPS: the "global information grid". This hegemony would be welcomed as the cutting edge of human progress. Or at worst, the military geeks candidly explained, US power would simply terrify others into submitting to the stars and stripes.

The Afghanistan war of 2001 taught the wrong lessons. The US assumed this was the model of how a small, special forces-dominated campaign, using local proxies and calling in gunships or airstrikes, would sweep away opposition. But all Afghanistan showed was how an outside power could intervene in a finely balanced civil war. The one-eyed Mullah Omar's great escape on his motorbike was a warning that the God's-eye view can miss the human detail.

Dr Richard Drayton, a senior lecturer in history at Cambridge University, is the author of Nature's Government, a study of science, technology and imperialism

2. Wiki on the War of the Worlds

 
At 7:33 PM, Blogger Nell said...

Re #8: A civil war has been on for a year, at least, and with U.S. forces functionally on one side.

No one denies it could get worse. The dispute is whether U.S. forces can do anything at all to prevent that. The burden is on anyone urging forces to stay to say what U.S. military forces can and should be doing to prevent that deterioration.

 
At 8:47 PM, Blogger Lotus said...

Prof Cole -

I'll leave aside my agreements and disagreements with your observations here (many more of the former than the latter) to raise a question that I believe no one else has asked. You said

The US has a responsibility to get out of Iraq responsibly

What does that mean? Seriously. What does that mean? Not in "peace with honor" or "Pottery Barn rule" bumperstickers, not "can't let them fall into sectarian warfare" soundbytes, but in actual policy on the ground?

What is it that you think we should do, should achieve (and how), to "get out responsibly?"

 
At 11:05 PM, Blogger Daniel said...

LarryE,

Last I read, Prof Cole favours withdrawing ground forces to "over the horizon" (likely Kuwait) and allowing the government forces to call in US air strikes/support as needed, with some special forces kept on alert (and maybe in Iraq?) to rescue downed pilots.

Meaning at least give the government forces a decisive advantage (that of air dominance) in preventing the nascent civil war from going from smouldering to full flames.

I imagine there would also be full logistical and training support to the Iraqi government forces too, even if the training takes place out of country.

Imperfect? Yep. Too bad all the really plausible options for success were ruined by Rumsfeld, Cheney, Bremner and Wolfy.

 
At 4:10 PM, Blogger M Henri Day said...

As always, Professor Cole’s analysis is both interesting and instructive. There are however, some points, in particular nos 3 and 8, regarding which I do not find his argument entirely convincing, and where further analysis seems required.

3. The guerrillas are winning the war against US forces. The guerrillas are really no more than mosquitos to US forces. …

Craig McKie, supra, has some important things to say about tactical problems, in particular the logistics problems, both with respect to materiel and to manpower facing the US forces. If I have correctly understood the situation with regard to recruitment in the United States, it seems that the US military is experiencing no little difficulty in reproducing itself, to the degree that persons from Latin America are being induced to serve as a short cut to US citizenship, something which might impel the historically minded to draw a Roman parallel. But in considering this matter, the same question must be asked of the other side – are the various forces attempting to repel the invader able to reproduce their men and materiel despite what would seem to be very high rates of attrition ? US propaganda efforts have spoken of the resistance (the term used is «insurgents» or «terrorists», but that is based upon a (deliberate ?) misunderstanding of or disdain for the Rules of War) as being in its last throes, but the evidence that this is the case is hardly convincing, at least if «last» is understood to have a finite temporal duration. So tactically, at least, it would seem – on the basis of publicly available information - that while the resistance cannot (yet ?) win set-piece battles against the vastly superior US forces, the logistical drain on what the latter requires to fight its war is much greater than that on what the former requires to fight its war.

But to make sense, the question has to be asked the other way around – are the US forces winning against the resistance ? - and here the answer must, I think, be couched more in strategic than in tactical terms. Some have stated above that for the resistance, it is enough to be there when the US withdraws, which it sooner or later must do. That answer seems to me to be a tad simplistic, in that it ignores the fact that the resistance to the US presence is hardly a monolith. It would seem that among the forces fighting the US in Iraq is a small minority which sees the struggle as part of a general campaign to re-establish the Khalifate ; I suspect for them that being there when the US withdraws would not be enough. Ba’athists and certain others want to preserve the unity of the state of Iraq ; for them, too, simply being around when the US leaves would not be sufficient to claim victory. For the Shi’ite leadership, however, which in the main is not participating actively in the resistance, being around (and armed) when the US leaves (the sooner the better ?) probably would suffice. And the Kurdish leadership wants a Kurdistan (plus Kirkuk) which may nominally be a part of an entity called Iraq, but is in fact, under their control, and that they seem to have achieved for the present – but what happens when the US leaves and the Turkish military starts taking an active interest ? On the other side of the board, what does the US want – or what is it willing to settle for, in strategic terms ? My view is the following : 1) To obtain control over Iraqi oil, or at least deny such control to an independent government which would pump it and sell it with whom and to whom it wished, even, which Bush’s God forbid, with prices denominated in Euros. Here, I think it safe to say that the US has succeeded. Iraq pumps and sells less oil today that before the invasion, but no government representing Iraq which has control over this resource independent of US wishes seems likely to come into being. 2) To show the serious consequences of incurring the displeasure of the United States pour, as Voltaire (and Napoleon) said, encourager les autres. Here again, I think, the US has succeeded ; from a position as one of the premier military and economic powers in southwest Asia, next Israel, Iraq has been divided and split into three statelets which are utterly unable to counter US (and Israeli) goals in the region. (The parallels with the US war in Vietnam are instructive – the US succeeded in showing the cost of defying its wishes by destroying Vietnam - and much of the rest of Indo-China - but was unable to prevent the unification of the severely wounded country under a regime very different from that it had envisaged. Suharto came to power in Indonesia (and remained there for 32 years), and the US attained and maintained control over the country’s oil resources. 70 – 30 to the US ?)

8. Iraq is already in a civil war, so it does not matter if the US simply withdraws precipitately, since the situation is as bad as it can get. No, it isn't. …

As others have pointed out, the US must withdraw sometime, partly for logistic, partly for political reasons. Unlike (the Iraqi portion of) the resistance, the US has global interests, and it seems difficult to believe that it can maintain a credible threat of an intervention with ground troops in say, Syria or (less likely) Iran, if it doesn’t withdraw a very large portion of the troops it has in Iraq. This, I think, is the essence of what Representative Murtha has been trying to communicate, information which he seems to have received from his contacts among the military leadership. At the same time, it is hard to believe that the present US administration, beset as it is by what seems to be a growing lack of confidence among large numbers of people in its ability to run the country, does not entertain thoughts of another military adventure, in order to get people to rally ‘round the flag. So it is reasonable to assume that within the next ten months, a considerable withdrawal of US ground troops from Iraq will, willy-nilly, take place. (This analysis seems to be confirmed by Seymour Hirsh’s recent piece in the New Yorker.) Even though the scale of fighting among the various groups in Iraq may increase – and remember, if we accept the Lancet report, which is the best we have to date, we are looking at a middle estimate for increased Iraqi deaths due to the war on the order of about 200000 persons – if the US withdraws, presuming that the US does not engage in saturation bombing of major Iraqi cities, it is unlikely that the toll of Iraqi dead and injured will worsen significantly. In any event, it is hard to see that by staying an extra ten months, the US could improve the situation significantly – certainly that isn’t the way it worked out in Vietnam, where, after the Nixon/Kissinger sabotage of the 1968 Paris Peace Talks, the war continued for another seven years. Sometimes when the bull has broken everything in the china shop, the best thing to do is to lead it out, so that others can pick up the pieces....

 
At 9:07 PM, Blogger Lotus said...

In response to my question about how Prof. Cole defined "responsible" withdrawal from Iraq, Dan outlined what he believes is the answer.

Dan -

Thanks for the reply. If this is indeed the good prof's position, I'll chalk it up as a noble attempt but nothing more.

The truth is, I don't see how conducting air strikes, "giv[ing] government forces a decisive advantage," and providing "full logistical and training support" to those forces constitutes withdrawal and - faced with a government that everyone admits is dominated by conservative Shiite religious parties - it strikes me less as preventing a civil war than it does as choosing sides in one.

 
At 12:29 PM, Blogger Martin Wisse said...

". Iraq is already in a civil war, so it does not matter if the US simply withdraws precipitately, since the situation is as bad as it can get. No, it isn't. During the course of the guerrilla war, the daily number of dead has fluctuated, between about 20 and about 60. But in a real civil war, it could easily be 10 times that. Some estimates of the number of Afghans killed during their long set of civil wars put the number at 2.5 million, along with 5 million displaced abroad and more millions displaced internally. Iraq is Malibu Beach compared to Afghanistan in its darkest hours. The US has a responsibility to get out of Iraq responsibly and to not allow it to fall into that kind of genocidal civil conflict."

You make two mistakes with this item i think:

The first is assuming the US, especially as led by team Bush has any interest in making sure Iraq will not fall into that sort of genocidal conflict. US history (Vietnam/Laos/Cambodia, El Salvador/Guatamala, Afghanistan) disagrees with you on this. The US is only interested in protecting its own.

The second is to think that even if the US cared, it could do anything about this civil war. It can't. the longer the US and its allies stay in Iraq, the worse the civil war will become! Look at how much worse the situation is now then it was a year ago and how much worse the situation was a year ago then it was two years ago.

The best thing the US can do is to leave *now*, rather than try to be "responsible", as its methods will just end up creating other Fallujahs, more conflict.

 

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