Tuesday, September 4, 2007

feudalism in Iraq [more]

from "Today's News" from the Washington POST's on-line e-magazine, SLATE, on September 4:

> Bush's visit to Iraq was shrouded in secrecy and he spent approximately eight hours in the country before continuing with his scheduled trip to Australia. He was joined by other top administration officials, and as everyone points out, Bush never left the fortified base. USAT notes that meeting with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Sunni country might have been designed as "a slight to al-Maliki," whom many consider to be running a sectarian government.

> More likely though, Anbar was chosen because it's seen as the clearest place where some success has been evident. But Anthony Cordesman, an Iraq expert, tells the NYT that Anbar isn't really exemplary of a successful American strategy since any progress there has more to do with the local frustration with al-Qaida in Iraq. Although Bush tried to bring both sides together yesterday, there is clearly still distrust between the Shiite central government and the Sunnis as many doubt the Anbar model can be exported to other areas.

> But that is exactly what the new U.S. strategy in Iraq has become, reports the WSJ in a Page One piece. The paper says that "after almost four years of trying to build Iraq's central government in Baghdad" the United States has concluded that "what appears to work best in the divided country is just the opposite." In other words, the United States is increasingly trying to prop up local leaders and the WSJ suggests this might amount to dividing the country into different areas, a strategy that sounds a lot like the "soft partition" that several Democrats have been advocating for some time. The thinking is that the United States should worry a bit less about the central government and hope that the country will remain united in the long run because local leaders will still depend on Baghdad for money.

> And, wait a minute, isn't that a strategy shift from the stated goals of the "surge" that was supposed to give some breathing room for politicians in Baghdad so they could make progress and create a model democracy in the Middle East? The "big change in the debate has come about because the surge failed, and it failed in an unexpected way," points out the NYT's David Brooks (subscription required) who says there is now a consensus that "peace will come to the center last, not to the center first."

> Both the WP and LAT check in on how the troop buildup is going and ask whether the surge is working. Short answer: no. The LAT goes through the depressing data: There's been little political progress, the number of Iraqis forced to leave their home has increased, there's been no significant drop in civilian deaths, and a new troubling trend has emerged of intra-Shiite killings. The best the LAT and WP can say is that things are sort of stable because neighborhoods have become more segregated, and there is a heightened presence of U.S. troops.

> Meanwhile, the WP notes U.S. troops can't trust many in the Iraqi army, which has been infiltrated by Shiite militias. And, to make matters worse, many of the Sunnis joining forces with the United States used to be insurgents and have a strong distrust of the Shiite government. No one really knows if they could ever really work together if U.S. troops leave.<

this sounds a lot like the feudalism from above strategy to me.
Jim Devine


4 comments:

rosserjb@jmu.edu said...

Juan Cole reports that civilian deaths in al-Anbar rose from June to July and from July to August, with nearly 1/6 of US deaths in Iraq occurring there, although it has only 1/24 of the population, although the latter is somewhat of an improvement. However, the claims of improved conditions for civilians there are simply false.

Anonymous said...

Is this Bush derangement syndrome?

Econoclast said...

I don't know if it's derangement {as in Bush derangement syndrome). The Bush League has had a policy of never admitting fault _ever_ and they seem to stick to it pretty well. Another policy of theirs is to shift all problems toward the future. Nowadays, it's so Hillary will pay the costs.

Bruce Webb said...

Speaking of never admitting fault, that was the creepiest part of that valentine Bush wrote for Laura. Small minds like mine will always retain that picture of Bush dropping Barney to the tarmac in front of that horrified girl. Yet here is how the revised version goes (third of 4 lines):

The dogs and the cat they miss you too, Barney's still mad you dropped him, he ate your shoe.

I don't know what is more disturbing, the possibility that Bush wrote this himself, or that someone wrote it for him. Either way he apparently will not accept responsibility for even the smallest misadventure. Though I have to say that shifting blame for dropping your pet to your wife via a valentine is sociopathic.