[ Previous ]   [ Next ]

Victory?

Stability

Last night I had dinner with a charming female war correspondent and my editor at the Dutch newspaper “NRC Handelsblad”. The editor alerted me to an article by Peter W. Galbraith on Iraq in The New York Review of Books: “We hear again and again from Washington that we have turned a corner in Iraq and are on the path to victory. If so, it is a strange victory. Shiite religious parties that are Iran's closest allies in the Middle East control Iraq's central government and the country's oil-rich south. A Sunni militia, known as the Awakening, dominates Iraq's Sunni center. It is led by Baathists, the very people we invaded Iraq in 2003 to remove from power. While the US sees the Awakening as key to defeating al-Qaeda in Iraq, Iraq's Shiite government views it as a mortal enemy and has issued arrest warrants for many of its members. Meanwhile the Shiite-Kurdish alliance that brought stability to parts of Iraq is crumbling. The two sides confronted each other militarily after the Iraqi army entered the Kurdish-administered town of Khanaqin in early September.
John McCain has staked his presidential candidacy on his early advocacy of sending more troops to Iraq. He says he is for victory while Barack Obama is for surrender; and polls suggest that voters trust McCain more on Iraq than they do Obama. In 2006, dissatisfaction with the Iraq war ended Republican control of both the House of Representatives and the Senate. This year, in spite of being burdened with the gravest financial crisis since 1929 and the most unpopular president since the advent of polling, the Republican presidential nominee is running a competitive race.”


12 comments Last_comment
A victory for Iraq
It would be a victory for Iraq if the American troops could leave the country. It would mean there is a certain amount of political stability there. But hey, the Americans never invaded Iraq for the citizens of Iraq. They are there to protect the American people. Therefor I can imagine that the American nation is shortsighted on this subject and trust McCain in this. It would be more wise to put their trust in Obama. Because he focusses his attention on the real problem: America itself.
Mini-review of the NY-review ???
There are thousands jigsaw pieces on the web contributing to the Iraq puzzle.
I do not have a clue wether this NY-review picture is true or false or somewhere in between.
Could A.G. or one of his secretaries not give us, the ignorant but interested civilians at least a hint what to think of the message.?
Dear Arnon,
you have been in Iraq. Did you have the idear that Iraq is a place were a war can be won? And in what sense?
I have the feeling that at certain places stability can only be reached when the strong hand of a dictator rules.
Iraq might be one of these places.

yours,

Eric
Eric
Based on anecdotal evidence I'm still more optimistic about Iraq than about Afghanistan.
Arnon
Did you wear a red shirt with long sleeves today? If so, I think I saw you walking on the other side of the Herengracht in Amsterdam today, across from where I'm working. If it was you, sorry for not saying hello, or be glad I wasn't bothering you. If it was not you, you have a the perfect double to look for in case you need one.
Dear Arnon,
you were also in Afghanistan.....
What anecdotal evidence makes you feel more positive about Afghanistan than of Iraq?
Do you know: Sebastian Haffner - Geschichte eines Deutschen.
If so, do you consider his observations anecdotal?

Eric
Peter
A red sweater. Yes, my hotel is on the Herengracht.
Eric
I know who Haffner is but I have never read his books.
Dear Arnon,
remains the more interesting question:
What anecdotal evidence makes you feel more positive about Afghanistan than of Iraq?

Eric
Eric
If you go to salon.com you will find some of my pieces on Iraq.
Dear Arnon
thank you for the salon.com pieces.
I enjoyed reading them.
I must say that your stories don't give to much reasons for being optimistic about Iraq.
But well, maybe compared to Afghanistan......?
People in Iraq don't tear up fliers?

Eric
I'm reading "Im Yesh Gan Eden" by Ron Leshem as we speak. It's about war and how to deal with it. Some of the points Mr. Arnon talked about earlier. I think it is a marvelous book.