It's March 2007 in Iraq

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Remember the dead.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 12 March 2007 05:41 (eighteen years ago)

It was either last month's or January's Iraq thread where I mentioned I felt compelled to at least email my house representative and make my opposition to the troop surge known. I also wanted to tell him that a lot of the old rhetoric posted on his house website is totally bunk ("...since the U.S. and our coalition partners liberated Iraq, Osama bin Laden has sought to defeat the efforts of the people of Iraq to transform their nation into a peace-loving democracy so he can turn it into a radical Islamic state where al-Qaeda calls the shots").

Anyway, I didn't expect a response, but yesterday I got a handwritten letter from him in the mail (dated Feb. 9). He wrote:

Karl, I agree with you we are Not in control. Only the IRAQI people with our aide [sic] can stabilize the situation. We are there. All of our allies agree if we have an unstable IRAQ their [sic] is tremendous potential for the void to cause tremendous unrest. This is the view of all IRAQ'S neighbors except IRAN. You have the potential for Nuclear proliferation in the Arab states. The IRAQ study supported a surge. In a few weeks we will know if it works. [u]They[/u] must show up with their faces (sometimes they haven't in the past). [u]They[/u] must go after thugs Shiite or Sunni regardless of political connection. If they do, some success. If not failure and I think we will go along the lines of IRAQ study group. [u]Thanks[/u], John


So yeah, it was polite of him not to just ignore my email, but I'm no less frustrated, especially because now, a month later, the surge hasn't stabilized a thing.

iiiijjjj, Monday, 12 March 2007 06:43 (eighteen years ago)

oh ok so we got [b] and [i] but no [u] tags huh

iiiijjjj, Monday, 12 March 2007 06:50 (eighteen years ago)

Gotta love how this current Senate troop withdrawal plan is oh so conveniently timed to coincide with the Nov '08 elections.

really subtle there guys.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 19:22 (eighteen years ago)

I'm no less frustrated, especially because now, a month later, the surge hasn't stabilized a thing.

Well, there seems to be SOME change -- akin to "Vietnamization" -- but we'll see if it's anything more than cosmetic.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 21:31 (eighteen years ago)

You'll have to explain that to me I'm afraid.

Ned Trifle II, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 21:48 (eighteen years ago)

A few reports have been filed attesting to the validity of American soldiers patrolling with Iraqis. Success at this point, of course, means "less Americans dying," so I suspect this is the administration's way of pulling a Nixon and declaring victory after we've given peripheral control to the embattled government("Vietnamization").

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 22:10 (eighteen years ago)

Stratfor, meanwhile, has posted this rumination:

----

Two Busted Flushes: The U.S. and Iranian Negotiations

By George Friedman

U.S., Iranian and Syrian diplomats met in Baghdad on March 10 to discuss the future of Iraq. Shortly afterward, everyone went out of their way to emphasize that the meetings either did not mean anything or that they were not formally one-on-one, which meant that other parties were present. Such protestations are inevitable: All of the governments involved have substantial domestic constituencies that do not want to see these talks take place, and they must be placated by emphasizing the triviality. Plus, all bargainers want to make it appear that such talks mean little to them. No one buys a used car by emphasizing how important the purchase is. He who needs it least wins.

These protestations are, however, total nonsense. That U.S., Iranian and Syrian diplomats would meet at this time and in that place is of enormous importance. It is certainly not routine: It means the shadowy conversations that have been going on between the United States and Iran in particular are now moving into the public sphere. It means not only that negotiations concerning Iraq are under way, but also that all parties find it important to make these negotiations official. That means progress is being made. The question now goes not to whether negotiations are happening, but to what is being discussed, what an agreement might look like and how likely it is to occur.

Let's begin by considering the framework in which each side is operating.

The United States: Geopolitical Compulsion

Washington needs a settlement in Iraq. Geopolitically, Iraq has soaked up a huge proportion of U.S. fighting power. Though casualties remain low (when compared to those in the Vietnam War), the war-fighting bandwidth committed to Iraq is enormous relative to forces. Should another crisis occur in the world, the U.S. Army would not be in a position to respond. As a result, events elsewhere could suddenly spin out of control.

For example, we have seen substantial changes in Russian behavior of late. Actions that would have been deemed too risky for the Russians two years ago appear to be risk-free now. Moscow is pressuring Europe, using energy supplies for leverage and issuing threatening statements concerning U.S. ballistic missile defense plans in Central Europe -- in apparent hopes that the governments in this region and the former Soviet Union, where governments have been inclined to be friendly to the United States, will reappraise their positions.

But the greatest challenge from the Russians comes in the Middle East. The traditional role of Russia (in its Soviet guise) was to create alliances in the region -- using arms transfers as a mechanism for securing the power of Arab regimes internally and for resisting U.S. power in the region. The Soviets armed Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Libya and so on, creating powerful networks of client states during much of the Cold War.

The Russians are doing this again. There is a clear pattern of intensifying arms sales to Syria and Iran -- a pattern designed to increase the difficulty of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes against either state and to increase the internal security of both regimes. The United States has few levers with which to deter Russian behavior, and Washington's ongoing threats against Iran and Syria increase the desire of these states to have Russian supplies and patronage.

The fact is that the United States has few viable military options here. Except for the use of airstrikes -- which, when applied without other military measures, historically have failed either to bring about regime change or to deter powers from pursuing their national interests -- the United States has few military options in the region. Air power might work when an army is standing by to take advantage of the weaknesses created by those strikes, but absent a credible ground threat, airstrikes are merely painful, not decisive.

And, to be frank, the United States simply lacks capability in the Army. In many ways, the U.S. Army is in revolt against the Bush administration. Army officers at all levels (less so the Marines) are using the term "broken" to refer to the condition of the force and are in revolt against the administration -- not because of its goals, but because of its failure to provide needed resources nearly six years after 9/11. This revolt is breaking very much into the public domain, and that will further cripple the credibility of the Bush administration.

The "surge" strategy announced late last year was Bush's last gamble. It demonstrated that the administration has the power and will to defy public opinion -- or international perceptions of it -- and increase, rather than decrease, forces in Iraq. The Democrats have also provided Bush with a window of opportunity: Their inability to formulate a coherent policy on Iraq has dissipated the sense that they will force imminent changes in U.S. strategy. Bush's gamble has created a psychological window of opportunity, but if this window is not used, it will close -- and, as administration officials have publicly conceded, there is no Plan B. The situation on the ground is as good as it is going to get.

Leaving the question of his own legacy completely aside, Bush knows three things. First, he is not going to impose a military solution on Iraq that suppresses both the Sunni insurgents and the Shiite militias. Second, he has successfully created a fleeting sense of unpredictability, as far as U.S. behavior is concerned. And third, if he does not use this psychological window of opportunity to achieve a political settlement within the context of limited military progress, the moment not only will be lost, but Russia might also emerge as a major factor in the Middle East -- eroding a generation of progress toward making the United States the sole major power in that region. Thus, the United States is under geopolitical compulsion to reach a settlement.

Iran: Psychological and Regional Compulsions

The Iranians are also under pressure. They have miscalculated on what Bush would do: They expected military drawdown, and instead they got the surge. This has conjured up memories of the miscalculation on what the 1979 hostage crisis would bring: The revolutionaries had bet on a U.S. capitulation, but in the long run they got an Iraqi invasion and Ronald Reagan.

Expediency Council Chairman Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani already has warned the Iranians not to underestimate the United States, saying it is a "wounded tiger" and therefore much more dangerous than otherwise. In addition, the Iranians know some important things.

The first is that, while the Americans conceivably might forget about Iraq, Iran never can. Uncontrolled chaos next door could spill over into Iran in numerous ways -- separatist sentiments among the Kurds, the potential return of a Sunni government if the Shia are too fractured to govern, and so forth. A certain level of security in Iraq is fundamental to Iran's national interests.

Related to this, there are concerns that Iraq's Shia are so fractious that they might not be serviceable as a coherent vehicle for Iranian power. A civil war among the Shia of Iraq is not inconceivable, and if that were to happen, Iran's ability to project power in Iraq would crumble.

Finally, Iran's ability to threaten terror strikes against U.S. interests depends to a great extent on Hezbollah in Lebanon. And it knows that Hezbollah is far more interested in the power and wealth to be found in Lebanon than in some global -- and potentially catastrophic -- war against the United States. The Iranian leadership has seen al Qaeda's leaders being hunted and hiding in Pakistan, and they have little stomach for that. In short, Iranian leaders might not have all the options they would like to pretend they have, and their own weakness could become quite public very quickly.

Still, like the Americans, the Iranians have done well in generating perceptions of their own resolute strength. First, they have used their influence in Iraq to block U.S. ambitions there. Second, they have supported Hezbollah in its war against Israel, creating the impression that Hezbollah is both powerful and pliant to Tehran. In other words, they have signaled a powerful covert capability. Third, they have used their nuclear program to imply capabilities substantially beyond what has actually been achieved, which gives them a powerful bargaining chip. Finally, they have entered into relations with the Russians -- implying a strategic evolution that would be disastrous for the United States.

The truth, however, is somewhat different. Iran has sufficient power to block a settlement on Iraq, but it lacks the ability to impose one of its own making. Second, Hezbollah is far from willing to play the role of global suicide bomber to support Iranian ambitions. Third, an Iranian nuclear bomb is far from being a reality. Finally, Iran has, in the long run, much to fear from the Russians: Moscow is far more likely than Washington to reduce Iran to a vassal state, should Tehran grow too incautious in the flirtation. Iran is holding a very good hand. But in the end, its flush is as busted as the Americans'.

Moreover, the Iranians still remember the mistake of 1979. Rather than negotiating a settlement to the hostage crisis with a weak and indecisive President Jimmy Carter, who had been backed into a corner, they opted to sink his chances for re-election and release the hostages after the next president, Reagan, took office. They expected gratitude. But in a breathtaking display of ingratitude, Reagan followed a policy designed to devastate Iran in its war with Iraq. In retrospect, the Iranians should have negotiated with the weak president rather than destroy him and wait for the strong one.

Rafsanjani essentially has reminded the Iranian leadership of this painful fact. Based on that, it is clear that he wants negotiations with Bush, whose strength is crippled, rather than with his successor. Not only has Bush already signaled a willingness to talk, but U.S. intelligence also has publicly downgraded the threat of Iranian nuclear weapons -- saying that, in fact, Iran's program has not progressed as far as it might have. The Iranians have demanded a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, but they have been careful not to specify what that timetable should look like. Each side is signaling a re-evaluation of the other and a degree of flexibility in outcomes.

As for Syria, which also shares a border with Iraq and was represented at Saturday's meetings in Baghdad, it is important but not decisive. The Syrians have little interest in Iraq but great interest in Lebanon. The regime in Damascus wants to be freed from the threat of investigation in the murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, and it wants to have its interests in Lebanon guaranteed. The Israelis, for their part, have no interest in bringing down the al Assad regime: They are far more fearful of what the follow-on Sunni regime might bring than they are of a minority Alawite regime that is more interested in money than in Allah. The latter they can deal with; the former is the threat.

In other words, Syria does not affect fundamental U.S. interests, and the Israelis do not want to see the current regime replaced. The Syrians, therefore, are not the decisive factor when it comes to Iraq. This is about the United States and Iran.

Essential Points

If the current crisis continues, each side might show itself much weaker than it wants to appear. The United States could find itself in a geopolitical spasm, coupled with a domestic political crisis. Iran could find itself something of a toothless tiger -- making threats that are known to have little substance behind them. The issue is what sort of settlement there could be.

We see the following points as essential to the two main players:

1. The creation of an Iraqi government that is dominated by Shia, neutral to Iran, hostile to jihadists but accommodating to some Sunni groups.
2. Guarantees for Iran's commercial interests in southern Iraqi oil fields, with some transfers to the Sunnis (who have no oil in their own territory) from fields in both the northern (Kurdish) and southern (Shiite) regions.
3. Guarantees for U.S. commercial interests in the Kurdish regions.
4. An Iraqi military without offensive capabilities, but substantial domestic power. This means limited armor and air power, but substantial light infantry.
5. An Iraqi army operated on a "confessional" basis -- each militia and insurgent group retained as units and controlling its own regions.
6. Guarantee of a multiyear U.S. presence, without security responsibility for Iraq, at about 40,000 troops.
7. A U.S.-Iranian "commission" to manage political conflict in Iraq.
8. U.S. commercial relations with Iran.
9. The definition of the Russian role, without its exclusion.
10. A meaningless but symbolic commitment to a new Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

Such an agreement would not be expected to last very long. It might last, but the primary purpose would be to allow each side to quietly fold its busted flushes in the game for Iraq.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 22:38 (eighteen years ago)

Saddam's sons and grandson reburied near his grave:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6449625.stm

(Made me wonder why nobody was parading around with the picture of that 14 year old grandson's body at that same press conference where it was announced his sons were shot)

StanM, Wednesday, 14 March 2007 18:34 (eighteen years ago)

Chlorine attacks Practical matters: Threat or menace?

Gorge, Saturday, 17 March 2007 19:47 (eighteen years ago)

THE DONALD FIRES OFF

Frogman Henry, Sunday, 18 March 2007 20:19 (eighteen years ago)

For a second I was thinking Rumsfeld had gone off! How dare you get my hopes up.

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 18 March 2007 20:21 (eighteen years ago)

From the NY Times -- an article called "The Women's War." Extremely detailed and saddening reading.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 March 2007 17:43 (eighteen years ago)

[link Reliving the jolly war attitude]http://www.dickdestiny.com/blog/2007/03/reliving-war-wankers-and-other-neat.html[link]

Gorge, Monday, 19 March 2007 18:25 (eighteen years ago)

my secret NPR shame: good interview with a lefty journalist writing about the rise of Blackwater
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=8992128

milo z, Monday, 19 March 2007 21:55 (eighteen years ago)

Excellent op-ed from today's NY Times:

Death of a Marine

By BOB HERBERT
Published: March 19, 2007

Jeffrey Lucey was 18 when he signed up for the Marine Reserves in December 1999. His parents, Kevin and Joyce Lucey of Belchertown, Mass., were not happy. They had hoped their son would go to college.

Jeffrey himself was ambivalent.

“The recruiter was a very smooth talker and very, very persistent,” Ms. Lucey told me in a call from Orlando, Fla., where she was on vacation with her husband and their two grown daughters last week. The conversation was difficult. Ms. Lucey would talk for a while, and then her husband would get on the phone.

“We see him everywhere,” Ms. Lucey said. “Every little dark-haired boy you see, it looks like Jeff. If we see a parent reprimanding a child, it’s like you want to go up and say, ‘Oh, don’t do that, because you don’t know how long you’re going to have him.’ ”

The war in Iraq began four years ago today. Fans at sporting events around the U.S. greeted the war and its early “shock and awe” bombing campaign with chants of “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!”

Jeffrey Lucey, who turned 22 the day before the war began, had a different perspective. He had no illusions about the glory or glamour of warfare. His unit had been activated and he was part of the first wave of troops to head into the combat zone.

A diary entry noted the explosion of a Scud missile near his unit: “The noise was just short of blowing out your eardrums. Everyone’s heart truly skipped a beat. ... Nerves are on edge.”

By the time he came home, Jeffrey Lucey was a mess. He had gruesome stories to tell. They could not all be verified, but there was no doubt that this once-healthy young man had been shattered by his experiences.

He had nightmares. He drank furiously. He withdrew from his friends. He wrecked his parents’ car. He began to hallucinate.

In a moment of deep despair on the Christmas Eve after his return from Iraq, Jeffrey hurled his dogtags at his sister Debra and cried out, “Don’t you know your brother’s a murderer?”

Jeffrey exhibited all the signs of deep depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Wars do that to people. They rip apart the mind and the soul in the same way that bullets and bombs mutilate the body. The war in Iraq is inflicting a much greater emotional toll on U.S. troops than most Americans realize.

The Luceys tried desperately to get help for Jeffrey, but neither the military nor the Veterans Administration is equipped to cope with the war’s mounting emotional and psychological casualties.

On the evening of June 22, 2004, Kevin Lucey came home and called out to Jeffrey. There was no answer. He noticed that the door leading to the basement was open and that the light in the basement was on. He did not see the two notes that Jeffrey had left on the first floor for his parents:

“It’s 4:35 p.m. and I am near completing my death.”

“Dad, please don’t look. Mom, just call the police — Love, Jeff.”

The first thing Mr. Lucey saw as he walked down to the basement was that Jeff had set up an arrangement of photos. There was a picture of his platoon, and photos of his sisters, Debra and Kelly, his parents, the family dog and himself.

“Then I could see, through the corner of my eye, Jeff,” said Mr. Lucey. “And he was, I thought, standing there. Then I noticed the hose around his neck.”

The Luceys hope that in talking about their family’s tragedy they will bring more attention to the awful struggle faced by so many troops suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and other emotional illnesses. “We hear of so many suicides,” said Mr. Lucey.

Ms. Lucey added, “We thought that if we told other people about Jeffrey they might see their loved ones mirrored in him, and maybe they would be more aggressive, or do something different than we did. We didn’t feel we had the knowledge we needed and we lost our child.”

The Luceys are more than just concerned and grief-stricken. They’re angry. They’ve joined an antiwar organization, Military Families Speak Out, and they want the war in Iraq brought to an end. “That’s the only way to prevent further Jeffreys from happening,” Ms. Lucey said.

Mr. Lucey made no effort to hide his bitterness over the government’s failure to address many of the critical needs of troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. His voice quivered as he said, “When we hear anybody in the administration get up and say that they support the troops, it sickens us.”

Nathan, Tuesday, 20 March 2007 04:15 (eighteen years ago)

that trump clip is AWESOME!

i wish they could bring bush in the boardroom on the apprentice!

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 20 March 2007 14:16 (eighteen years ago)

And on and on

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 20 March 2007 20:00 (eighteen years ago)

Interesting NY Times interview with a now-departed Bush admin official -- not specifically about Iraq but there are moments...

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 21 March 2007 13:12 (eighteen years ago)

Getting [link="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6479821.stm"]closer[/link]

Tom D., Thursday, 22 March 2007 14:41 (eighteen years ago)

Getting http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6479821.stm

Tom D., Thursday, 22 March 2007 14:42 (eighteen years ago)

my secret NPR shame: good interview with a lefty journalist writing about the rise of Blackwater
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=8992128

milo z on Monday, 19 March 2007 21:55 (2 days ago)

I caught that too - gave me some powerful creeps.

But Leonard Lopate has stuff like that fairly often - his show is great. He started on WBAI, you know.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 22 March 2007 16:05 (eighteen years ago)

Oh wait, shit, I just realized that link is a Terry Gross interview with the same dude - didn't catch that one.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 22 March 2007 16:06 (eighteen years ago)

Ken Pollack laundered

Gorge, Friday, 23 March 2007 00:18 (eighteen years ago)

http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2007/POLITICS/03/23/iraq.funding/newt1.bush.fri.01.jpg

Bush attacks Iraq deadline

The House of Representatives today passed a spending bill that includes a firm deadline -- August 31, 2008 -- for combat troops to leave Iraq. President Bush said the House had abdicated its responsibility to protect the troops and denounced the vote as "political theater." He said the vote had only one outcome: "It delays the delivery of vital resources for our troops."



HERE I AM USING MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AS PROPS! THEATER LOL

Catsupppppppppppppp dude ‫茄蕃‪, Friday, 23 March 2007 18:43 (eighteen years ago)

And on and on:

Days after the Mutanabi Street blast, Nejah Hayiani, 61, gingerly pulled a blackened trouser leg from the rubble. A cellphone attached to the waistband told him it belonged to his dead brother, Mohammed.

"We didn't find bodies, we just found pieces of flesh," he said bitterly.

The brothers grew up on Mutanabi Street. Their father opened the Renaissance bookshop in 1957. Here, artists, poets and book lovers from all backgrounds converged to leaf through dusty tomes of Ottoman history, religious texts and Shakespeare's sonnets, always watchful for the eavesdropping government informers who lurked in the alleys. From there they would wander over to the Shahbandar cafe for a glass of tea in a room swirling with lively debate and the sweet smoke of water pipes.

Mohammed Hayiani took over the shop from his father. A nephew, Yehyia, opened a small store nearby, specializing in lawbooks. Now both shops are in ruins, their owners and staff slaughtered in the March 5 blast that killed more than 30 and sent thousands of charred pages fluttering into the sky.

"The future is dark," Nejah Hayiani said. "If the thinkers are targeted and killed, who will lead Iraq? Only the ignorant."

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 25 March 2007 19:06 (eighteen years ago)

George Packer has another in a series of amazing, depressing Iraq articles in the most recent New Yorker. This one profiles those Iraqis who had been hopeful about American intervention ad tracks how poorly the American presence in Iraq has taken care of them or even valued their perspectives.

horseshoe, Sunday, 25 March 2007 19:38 (eighteen years ago)

How dare you bring that up when the surge is working? Kristol and Kagan said so. (And how desperate are these clods getting? They know this is their only chance to salvage anything for themselves out of this.)

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 25 March 2007 19:49 (eighteen years ago)

This full report from Barry McCaffrey is worth the read. It's blunt about the problems but claims success is still possible. Rose-colored, I suspect, but not as glowing as some of the hogwash out there, and he allows for what optimism there is to be conditional -- which is of course the constantly sad apart about all this.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 29 March 2007 03:35 (eighteen years ago)

This part, I felt, says it all in terms of what damage there is already wrought -- those claiming that leaving Iraq is a big strategic mistake etc. etc. don't seem to realize that the damage is likely already done:

It is very unlikely that the US political opposition can constitutionally force the President into retreat. However, our next President will only have 12 months or less to get Iraq straight before he/she is forced to pull the plug. Therefore, our planning horizons should assume that there are less than 36 months remaining of substantial US troop presence in Iraq. The insurgency will continue in some form for a decade. This suggests the fundamental dilemma facing US policymakers.

The US Armed Forces cannot sustain the current deployment rate. We will leave the nation at risk to other threats from new hostile actors if we shatter the capabilities of our undersized and under-resourced Army, Marine, and special operations forces. The Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs must get Congress to provide emergency levels of resources, manpower, and energy into this rapidly failing system. If we do not aggressively rebuild ---the capability of the force actually deployed in Iraq will also degrade--- and we are likely to encounter a disaster.

The primary war winning strategy for the United States in the coming 12 months must be for Ambassador Ryan and General Petraeus to focus their considerable personal leadership skills on getting the top 100 Shia and Sunni leaders to walk back from the edge of all-out civil war. Reconciliation is the way out. There will be no imposed military solution with the current non-sustainable US force levels. Military power cannot alone defeat an insurgency—the political and economic struggle for power is the actual field of battle.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 29 March 2007 03:40 (eighteen years ago)

Also, the angry bite of so many of the comments throughout rather pleases me:

We will be forced to call up as many as nine National Guard combat brigades for an involuntary second combat tour this coming year. (Dr Chu at DOD has termed this as “no big deal.”)

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 29 March 2007 03:41 (eighteen years ago)


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