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On Anniversary, Views of Surge Diverge
WASHINGTON - Exactly one year after U.S. President George W. Bush announced that he would significantly increase the number of troops deployed to Iraq, the wisdom of his so-called "surge" strategy remains very much in dispute here.
While even many Democrats, who have sought in vain to reverse the strategy since it was first announced, now concede that it has helped reduce the violence in Baghdad and other parts of Iraq, critics say that its ultimate political objective -- national reconciliation between Iraq's three major ethnic and sectarian groups -- remains as distant as ever.
Some even argue that the surge, which added some 30,000 troops to the 140,000 deployed to Iraq at the time of Bush's announcement, may actually have enhanced prospects for a bloodier civil war by effectively permitting the warring sides -- now more demographically segregated than ever -- to re-group and re-arm in anticipation of a new round of bloodletting as U.S. troops withdraw.
"The thing that worries me most of all is what happens over the next 12 to 24 months in Iraq," ret. Army Gen. Douglas MacGregor, an outspoken critic of U.S. strategy in the Iraq war since the 2003 invasion, told National Public Radio (NPR) earlier this week. "Could we have actually made matters worse in the long term?"
The surge, which actually got underway in February under the command of Gen. David Petraeus, was designed primarily to increase U.S. troop strength and military operations in a way that would both halt the slide into all-out civil war between the Sunni and Shi'a communities and provide greater security to all sides.
The goal, in Bush's words, was to provide the Shi'a-dominated government with "the breathing space it needs" to "make reconciliation [with the Sunni insurgency] possible".
As laid out by Bush one year ago, that reconciliation would be signaled by the passage by Iraq's National Assembly of key legislative "benchmarks", including a reform of the de-Ba'athification programme; an oil law that would ensure equitable distribution of the revenue gained from Iraq's energy resources; and constitutional reforms that, among other things, would result in provincial elections in 2007.
There is little doubt that violence in Iraq, and especially in Baghdad and al Anbar province, has fallen dramatically. According to statistics assembled by Petraeus' command, attacks against both civilians and U.S. and Iraqi forces have fallen by 60 percent since just last summer when the surge reached its full strength, and even compared to the all-time high of December 2006 when more than 1,500 deaths from ethnic or sectarian violence were recorded in Baghdad alone.
At the same time, however, a major debate has broken out over how much that decline was due to the surge itself. While the more aggressive counter-insurgency tactics pursued by Petraeus may have played an important role in the capital, in particular, experts point as well to other factors that were not directly related to the surge itself.
Indeed, by the time the surge got underway, the process of "sectarian cleansing" in formerly mixed Shi'a-Sunni neighbourhoods in and around Baghdad had been mostly completed, thus reducing a major catalyst for sectarian violence.
Many analysts also point to the pre-surge decision by key Sunni tribal groups, initially in al Anbar province, to turn against al Qaeda in Iraq. By deciding that al Qaeda was the dangerous enemy, the so-called "Sunni Awakening" movement, led in many cases by former Ba'athists, became de facto U.S. allies, effectively pacifying the region where U.S. forces had suffered the highest casualty rates in the war.
Similarly, the decision by Shi'a cleric Moqtada al Sadr to order his powerful Mahdi Army to stand down -- largely as a result of the popular backlash caused by its operations in Najaf, according to one Pentagon consultant, ret. Gen. Barry McCaffrey -- has also helped reduce bloodshed.
In any event, the reductions in violence have been hailed by the surge's defenders as proof that the strategy has been a brilliant success, comparable, according to some particularly enthusiastic right-wing commentators, to George Washington's victory over the British or General Grant's defeat of the Confederacy in the U.S. civil war.
Indeed, Weekly Standard editors Fred Barnes and William Kristol named Petraeus as the "Man of the Year" and described his counter-insurgency campaign, particularly his alliance with the Awakening movement, renamed Concerned Local Citizens (CLCs), as a "strategic breakthrough" for U.S. goals in the "broader Middle East".
Even Petraeus, however, cautions that declarations of victory are premature, not only because of the scheduled withdrawal of the 30,000 surge troops over the next six months, but also because the tactics he has employed have not yet translated into real progress at the national level in achieving the reconciliation that Bush set as the strategic objective one year ago.
Indeed, the Pentagon's top Middle East aide, Mark Kimmitt, told the right-wing Heritage Foundation earlier this week that 2008 will likely be "far more difficult" than 2007 because Washington will have to "depend far more on the Iraqis themselves" to achieve reconciliation. He rated the chances of sustaining the security gains achieved during the past year at only "50-50".
That appears to be the assessment of many independent observers, including some key surge boosters, such as McCaffrey, who has also expressed doubt as to whether the surge's gains on the security front are sustainable in the face of the U.S. drawdown and the absence of progress on the political front.
A particular point of contention at this point is the future of the Sunni Awakening, re-named CLCs, more than 80,000 of whom are currently being paid and equipped by the U.S. military. Washington is pushing hard for them to be integrated into the official, Shi'a-dominated Iraqi security forces, but the Maliki government is worried that they will eventually turn their guns against it.
"There has been no strategy for integrating these militias into the Shi'a central government, which now feels threatened by the growing power of the Sunnis," according to a new report by the National Security Network. "In the long run, this approach threatens to further split Iraq and exacerbate sectarian tensions."
"We need to understand that buying off your enemy is a good, short-term solution to gain a respite from violence, but it's not a long-term solution to creating a legitimate political order inside a country that, quite frankly, is recovering from the worst sort of civil war," said MacGregor. "...Are we not actually setting Iraq up for a worse civil war than the one we've already seen?"
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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17 Comments so far
Show AllWow, at least now we know where all the Iraqi food is disappearing to.
Let's review: first, we had WMDs; then we had "a plan" to create WMDs; then what the heck - we overthrew Saddam; ah shucks - then we created democracy! I think that was the storyline . . . (don't mention the oil - pleeeaasssseeee . . . . .)
Now, the Surge: first, we create an environment so the Iraqis can politically unify their country; then, when politics fail we can claim that violence is down; then we can ethnically segregate communities; then we can arm the minority against the governing majority; then we can actually give cash as a bonus for killing other Iraqis!!!!!
And of course, don't mention the _ _ _ !!!!
As NPR reported this week, members of the CLCs are being bought off with payments of $10 per day not to attack us to the tune of more than $250 million per year. 80,000 x $10 x 365. On the one hand it is a bargain compared to the cost of war. On the other hand it is a lot of cash for a very short success and is an odd perversion of paying a bully lunch money not to be attacked.
These folks in the CLCs don't like us but will take the $$ as long as it is available. Can't believe this weeks bombing of Sunnis is going to help a whole lot to maintain this crackpot policy. The Iraqis have done nothing to consolidate the opportunity for political solutions and I suspect the surge has been designed, and is being operated, to last through the November elections when another war monger is elected. After that all bets are off.
2008 will be the 6th year in a row of victory in Iraq.
We have visited death the equivalent of 6000 9/11/2001 attacks on the U.S. on the small, but oil rich nation of Iraq. That is a 9/11 every day for more than 16 years. While Iraq had nothing whatsoever to do with the Reichstag fire operation on 9/11/2001, I think it is a useful metaphor to put what we have done to those people in perspective.
To consider a reduction in violence there any sort of justice is like Himmler bragging about reducing poison gas costs at Auschwitz when the camp population fell.
The math: 1,000,000+ killed by bombing and other forms of violence since March of 2003. 500,000 killed by sanctions under Clinton, most of those deaths elderly and children. Total 1.5 million people killed.
U.S. population 300 million plus. Iraqi population 26 million. So to get equivalent effect you have to multiply by 12. So we have killed the equivalent of 18 million Americans, or 6000 9/11s.
We and many others on this planet are living in the most egregious and crushing "decade of deception" imaginable in the history of civilization.
The MSM spin-doctors are at it again. The question is never about when to end an immoral and illegal war for plunder. The question is whether sending tens of thousands more troops was successful in brutalizing and pacifying a population that doesn't want us there.
If we are supposed to be there to bring them democracy why is it that we ignore the will of the almost 80% of Iraqis who want us to leave? Just leave that one to the spin-doctors too.
It's like a bunch of gangsters break into a house to plunder it and then the occupants start to fight back and all hell breaks loose. A few more gangsters are sent to the house to put down the "insurgency". After the criminals practically destroy the house and kill most of the occupants they declare that they were right all along because the occupants aren't fighting back as much as they used to. See, there!
Just listened to MLK Jr.'s Riverside speech again. One year to the day before these same fascists murdered him and 5 years after they murdered JFK.
"How long will they kill our prophets while we stand aside and look?" BM
At any rate King was talking about how the US talks about "strategy" and "democracy" while they murder helpless peasants
and destroy there lands so wealthy landlords can rule.
How long?
Thank you, thank you, thank you. Finally somebody has summed up the reasons why this "surge" has been a dismal failure. It hasn't brought about the political reconciliation it was supposed to, and the reduction in violence which everyone cites as the concilation prize is something the surge had almost nothing to do with. The only thing that will motivate the warring factions to reconcile is the definite withdrawl date of the current referees, our brave and horribly misused troops.
Leaving all the hype where it belongs in the nearest garbage can! We are still stuck in the middle of a mess we started. With no end in sight. It's growing more expensive by the day. And Bush is bankrupting the country! So where is anything different than it was a year ago?????????
Nobody seems to point out the fact that we are now paying the iraqi tribal chiefs and arming them to help fight al queda. The surge is working, the surge in greenbacks being doled out.
What a great country!!!!!!!!
Establishing Dachau in 1933 reduced incidents of violent clashes.
The ongoing strategy is arming two factions and letting them kill one another off. A strategy the US and all colonial powers have used over and over throughout history. Divide and conquer. The US armed both Iraq and Iran during the Iran-Iraq war. More recently the Kurdistan Workers Party or PKK were allies from the 1990's against Saddam, now the US is giving Turkey co-ordinates to bomb their positions. The US supported Bin Laden against the Russians, the US even supported Ho Chi Minh when he was fighting the Japanese.
Widows, traumatized and the disabled are easier to control once the fighting-aged members of a population are liquidated . . . 10 years of sanctions killed an estimated 1-5 million Iraqi children, a generation who will not be alive to fight a permanent occupation . . . to seize the last 30 years of oil left on the planet.
Listen to the the people not the pundits.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlgav80cpbg
ABE W GOODMAN -- As SIOUXROSE says so well (in another thread), "They've been positioned against each other."
What is at first missing in one of the opposing "pseudo-camp", is actually generated in opposition of the position of the other"pseudo-camp".
In other words, each "pseudo-camp" actually creates its own opposition out of otherwise neutrally inclined victims.
The overlord chess board strategists know that these types of contrived conflicts are self-sustaining after the initial bristling of neck hairs rise, and love to see the critters tear into each other.
These sick wicked sadists profit from both sides of the conflicts that they create, avoid entanglement, and simultaneously feel superior and above the petty details of WAR.
It is time that these in-human non-animal beasts are brought back down into the dust and blood that they create so easily, and come into relation with the evil that they've wrought on others (like, but hardly the same).
It is their own contrived lack of empathy, compassion and any feeling for the victims, that creates the SEPARATION needed to invoke such wicked and evil acts on humans and this Earth. They make the devil's deal for ungodly profits, and loose their humanity as
sociopaths (i.e. psychopaths).
What unmitigated pain these evil doers must hold within,
is proportional to the wicked pain that they inflict upon other peoples (see here).
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
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MICKEY I -- Excellent video!
I think that the short Ron Paul Leader (Let me see if I got this right?) is well positioned to introduce the utterly profound and extremely powerful Dr. Dahlia Wasfi.
This woman's passionate plea for Iraqi justice for tens of millions suffering now, and nearly as many dead, is wondrous and very moving.
This heroic lady's words and thoughts deserve everybody's attention