Posted by
Tom Grey - Liberty Dad on Saturday, October 07, 2006 5:46:00 AM
Glenn at
Instapundit is wondering why we are losing momentum in Iraq. He quotes Iraq the Model approvingly:
"this war will not see an end unless America revives the preemptive
war strategy and start chasing the enemies and striking their bases in
the region, especially in Syria and Iran."
That seems right to me, and I don't understand why the Bush Administration has let the momentum grind to a halt.Glenn quotes TM Lutas saying he's wrong:
"The US is fundamentally trying to slow things down, occasionally biting
where it chooses, chewing, and swallowing chunks of Al Queda and
company at its convenience. Al Queda tries to make it politically
impossible to maintain a sustainable pace so that the US is forced by
political realities into burnout, leading to an opportunity where Al
Queda can actually claim a durable military victory."Glenn quotes an email from Barry Dauphin:
to paraphrase someone else, you go to war with the democracy that you
have. Democracies have to fight wars with a certain level of popular
support or they can't genuinely fight. Bush's approval ratings aren't
low because we haven't invaded Syria, but because Iraq is so very
difficult.
Finally he quotes an anonymous source:
The Pentagon strategy is a very deliberate form of tough love that is forcing the Iraqis to defend their own country.
Arabs are culturally the most passive, fence-sitting people on the
planet. By their own admission they follow the strongest leader out
there.
This is almost correct. Tough love is about growing up.
This is the Iraqi "War for Independence." After it is won, those Iraqis who were murdered while standing in lines to join the Police or the Army, they will be Iraqi heros. Most survivors will be for a democratic Iraq, and claim to have always been strongly in favor.
The Iraq war is an Iraq story, not an American story. (Just like Vietnam was not really an American story.) In the Harry Potter stories, it is Harry who must slowly gain the strength to face evil Voldemort (Islamofacists are deatheaters!)
Iraq is the Harry Potter in the Iraq war story. America is Hermione and Ron, and Dumbledore too -- supporting Harry, often doing things, but the decisive actions are Harry's actions.
Both Reps and Dems have the problem of pretending that the Iraq War is an American story, so that either we are main character Harry or main evil (Bush is Hitler/ Voldemort!).
If this was the Lord of the Rings, America would be Gondor, and Iraq would be Frodo.
Glenn earlier talks about Mark Steyn's upcoming book, America alone.
The real reason America is alone is because Western Civilization is missing a myth, missing a story -- of
how a Good, Strong King can still be fighting against weak, evil people.
Either the King is Good but weak; or Strong but not so good -- or else he's not much involved in the story.
The story from Bin Laden is usally both -- America is NOT good (Great Satan), AND America is weak (Vietnam, Shah of Iran, Somalia, Rwanda ... and Iraq).
Finally, Glenn's anonymous source correctly concludes with comparisons, something the MSM fails to do, with the Iraq action and some French and Russian actions.
The French lost 18,000 in Algeria, a KIA rate three and a half
times ours. The Soviets lost 14,000 in Afghanistan, a KIA rate twice
ours. The Russians officially lost 5500 in the First Chechen War of
1994-96, but Soldiers' Mothers of Russia puts the actual number at
14,000, a KIA rate ten times ours. Nobody knows how many Russian troops
have died in the Second Chechen War, but Soldiers' Mothers of Russia
had the number at 11,000 by 2003.
Our strategy in Iraq is sound. It's keeping our own casualties down, and it's forcing the Iraqis to defend themselves.
Don't despair. We're winning.
Yes. "We" are winning -- but actually, only Iraq can win. We just share.
++In this WSJ article, returning from Iraq First Lt. Pete Hegseth argues for more troops (it should be fully read):
The future of Samarra, and Iraq as
a whole, ultimately lies in the hands of her people--their sympathies
are the ultimate prize in this war. No matter how many insurgents we
kill, city leaders we meet or policemen we enlist, it is all for naught
if we cannot provide security and stability. Tribal sheikhs told us
that even within Samarra--deep in the Sunni triangle--a vast majority
of people just want peace and order and will side with whoever can
provide it.
The end goal in Samarra is for
Iraqis to do everything for themselves. But their government and
security forces are not ready. Insurgents use death threats and murder
to assert power over anyone working with the City Council or joining
the police force. This atmosphere forces moderate Samarrans to keep
their mouths shut, and their silence abets the insurgents who live and
fight in Samarra. Despite killing scores of insurgents, we are unable
to provide lasting security, and so the Samarran street slips away.
How terrorists successfully terrorize moderates certainly needs to be told more. If I believed that more troops would make the moderate Samarrans brave enough, sure of winning, to fight the terrorists by merely calling in where the terrorists are staying, then I'd favor more troops. I flatly do not believe that the 'moderates' will really do so for US, or primarily US forces.
"Rather than take the risks
necessary--like small patrol bases and frequent foot patrols--our unit
opted to secure itself and its supply routes rather than commit
resources inside the city. And while this approach is safer in the
short run, it only prolongs mission accomplishment, ultimately
endangering more troops."
Here is where Lt. Hegseth is wrong about the mission. He thinks the mission is to kill insurgents. No.
The mission is to create an Iraqi Security Force able and willing to kill the insurgents.
His own analysis shows why more troops would not succeed in the mission of creating a stronger Iraqi Security Force:
"American troops are tolerated,
even welcomed when they effectively provide security; but their
presence is cursed when it does not accompany progress. Violence
persists not because American troops are present, but because our
presence is futile. Many local leaders asked us, "How come the most
powerful country in the world cannot defeat local criminals and thugs?"
They suggested our failure was part of a larger conspiracy to keep the
Iraqi people suffering."
The local leaders want the USA to do the work of defeating local criminals and thugs -- so that they local leaders can get the security benefit AND blame the US for any problems.
NO. NO. NO. Violence persists because the "local leaders" are NOT leading the Iraqi people to actively STOP the violence, by telling the US and Iraqi forces who the terrorists are.
Iraqi violence needs to be owned by the Iraqi leaders, and the US military mission is to ensure that local Iraqi pro-democracy leaders can win any battle they are willing to fight.
If Rummy is saying that the US job is to end the insurgency, he is wrong. He should be saying that it's the job of the Iraqi leaders to end the insurgency, and we are there to make sure they don't lose any significant battles.