The Way Out of Iraq

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Posted April 10, 2008 | 02:01 PM (EST)



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After the exhausting and dispiriting testimony of General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker to Congress this week, it is now even more starkly apparent that we are stuck in Iraq with no exit strategy. The plan of the Bush administration, and of these military and diplomatic leaders, is still to "stay the course" and hope things will finally take hold in Iraq: hope that the competing Iraqi parties and factions will finally settle their biggest political differences; hope that the Iraqi Army will finally show the ability to face down threats to security and hold the country together; hope that "strategic patience" will eventually allow us to draw down our forces to a level that will not stretch the U.S. Army to the breaking point. But as a group of mid-level American military officers who served in Iraq observed in a devastating edited volume of this name, "Hope is Not a Plan."

To be fair, the U.S. military surge in Iraq (and its attendant shift in strategy on the ground), has achieved many positive things. Iraqi and American casualties have fallen sharply (by more than two-thirds on some measures) from their peak levels in 2006 and early 2007. The Iraqi army and police have grown by roughly 100,000, in addition to some 80,000 local community militia forces ("concerned local citizens") armed and paid by the U.S. As a result of increased force levels and a dramatic change in strategy toward engaging the Sunni Arab communities (including forces once active in the resistance), Al Qaeda has been driven out of most Sunni Arab communities, particularly in Anbar province, and its fearful grip on that section of the country has been broken. This has been the most important achievement of the surge. In many Iraqi urban neighborhoods, both in Baghdad and in other cities, particularly in the once lawless Anbar province, Iraqis have been able to return to the streets and to something approaching normal commercial and social life.

These are not small achievements. Unfortunately, in the absence of a larger and more tough-minded strategy, they are also not sustainable ones.

John McCain may have been right for the moment when he declared to the Kansas Veterans of Foreign Wars on April 7, "We are no longer staring into the abyss of defeat." Unfortunately, in the context of continued political stalemate in Baghdad and the absence of a viable political strategy for stabilizing Iraq, the second part of his sentence simply does not follow: "... and we can now look ahead to the genuine prospect of success." Rather, as Petraeus and Crocker unwittingly made clear, what we can look forward to is the indefinite commitment of 130,000 to 140,000 American troops, holding together a country that would otherwise shatter into much wider bloodshed. Hope is not a formula for success.

The truth is, we remain trapped in an awful quagmire. No less staunch a Republican than Senator Richard Lugar observed in the Senate hearings this week, "Simply appealing for more time to make progress is insufficient." Senator McCain lacks the candor or clarity of mind to recognize that absent a new political strategy, we are stuck in a holding pattern, propping up a badly divided and corrupt political class in Baghdad. At least he has had the candor, however, to acknowledge that, under these circumstances, American troops might have to be in Iraq for another 10, 20, or 100 years.

Senators Clinton and Obama, in turn, recognize that the United States cannot maintain large numbers of American troops in Iraq for anything like that long. Not only will Iraqi resistance forces rise up against it again, but these commitments are draining our fiscal and military vitality.

Even if we were to leave Iraq tomorrow, it would take years to rebuild, re-equip, and reset the American armed forces to their pre-war levels of capacity and readiness. In a survey of American military officers by the Center for a New American Security, 88 percent thought the war had stretched the US military dangerously thin. And then there is the question of what kind of Army we will be left with as we have to lower standards further and further to find the "recruits" to sustain this military quagmire. CNN reported on April 7 that one out of every eight new recruits requires a waiver because of past criminal behavior or other prior misconduct. The percentage of high school graduates among recruits has declined to 79%. Retired General Barry McCaffrey said recently that ten percent of Army recruits "should not be in uniform." And when the Vice-Chief of Staff of the Army testifies (as General Richard Cody did last week) that repeated deployments are placing "incredible stress on our soldiers and their families" and that "our readiness is being consumed as fast as we can build it," you know we have a serious problem.

Yet Clinton and Obama don't see the other side of this awful reality: that a swift, unconditional timetable for withdrawal of the kind they propose (on the order of one to two combat brigades per month) would likely see Iraq slip back into all-out civil war -- unless something dramatic changes in the political landscape there.

We urgently need an exit strategy from Iraq, but it cannot simply be to declare we are leaving by some fixed, early date -- and goodbye and good luck. Without the prospect of a substantial American military drawdown on the near horizon, Iraq's political factions will lack the incentive to make the hard choices for a sustainable compromise that might hold the country together. But in the absence of an intense diplomatic effort to broker this compromise, the prospect of imminent American withdrawal will not induce compromise, but rather rigidity and the psychology of preparing for an imminent civil war.

So what needs to be done?

To begin with, we need a more hard-headed analysis of our real interests. For years now, the Bush administration has leaned toward the Shiite Islamist political party, ISCI (the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI). ISCI and its militia, the Badr Organization, which has heavily penetrated the Iraqi army and police, were formed in exile in Iran in the 1980s and grew up under the heavy influence there of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. They subscribe to the hard-core Khomeini of system "velayat al faqih" -- rule by the Islamic jurist. And they have welcomed numerous Iranian agents into Iraq to help them establish that system.

Of the many grand blunders of the Bush administration in Iraq, one of the biggest has been the analytical failure to see that ISCI"s political triumph in Iraq would bring a strategic bonanza to Iran -- effective control of at least the southern half of Iraq. To pave the way for this, ISCI and its leader, the ailing Islamist cleric, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, have long sought to gather all nine provinces in the Shiite southern half of the country into a single super-region, which would enable ISCI to establish political hegemony over the entire Shiite region, control most of the country's oil resources (based mainly in the Basra area of the far south), and dominate the politics of the center.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's recent ill-fated crackdown on the Mahdi Army militia of Muqtada al-Sadr was not just about establishing order in the south. A more important subterranean motive (for which the United States allowed itself to be used) was to remove the chief obstacle to ISCI's bid for hegemony in the south. Sadr and his disparate political and militia forces oppose the creation of a Shiite super-region, and constitute the most significant political rival to ISCI (and its junior partner in Shiite politics, Nuri al-Maliki's Dawa party). ISCI's calculation has been that if Sadr could be neutralized, its path to victory in the coming provincial elections in October could be cleared, and then it could press forward with its aim of gathering all nine southern provinces into one.

We should have no illusions: Sadr is a nasty, deeply illiberal character. His militia forces, or those who swagger around, draped in weapons, seizing territory and imposing Islamic order in his name, often approximate the Taliban in their level of commitment to human rights, women's rights, religious freedom, and the rule of law. But Sadr's political movement is a broad tent that also includes more nationalist Shiite elements who share with one another (and with many Sunni Arab factions with whom they have been in contact) a determined resistance to ISCI's and Iran's bid to control southern Iraq, and through that region, the country as a whole. In other words, the participation of the Sadrist movement in electoral politics at least preserves political fluidity and pluralism. Its elimination, while leaving ISCI and its tightly knit militia network in control of much of the security apparatus and of existing provincial governments in the south, paves the way for Iranian domination.

One of the greatest and most bitter ironies of the Bush administration's posture in Iraq has been its persistent failure to see how it was handing the greatest threat to security in the region -- the Islamic Republic of Iran -- a grand strategic prize. So far, the Iranian regime has largely succeeded in its goals of bogging the U.S. down in a bleeding insurgency, draining its military and its treasure and sapping its will, until the point that Iraq (so they think) will fall into their hands like a ripe apple. No wonder the Iranian ruling elite so often seems to be smiling like a mafia gang on its way to eliminating its rivals. As one Iraqi recently observed to me, "The Iranians are more intellectual, more strategic, and more patient than the U.S. The Bush administration's approach in Iraq has been purely tactical. When the U.S. spends a billion dollars in Iraq, Iran spends $50 million and gets more."

It is not clear that this strategic victory for Iran in Iraq can be prevented at this point. Certainly it will not come from the Kurds, who have long since struck a cynical bargain with ISCI: they can have their Shiite super-region, and in return the Kurds want to absorb into their Kurdistan region the city and province of Kirkuk, whose vast oil resources would make eventual Kurdish independence a much more viable proposition.

It does not take much facility in political arithmetic to figure out who are the big losers in all of this: first of all the Sunni Arabs (about twenty percent of Iraq's population), who have no major oil producing assets in the provinces where they predominate, and who believe the creation of a Shiite super-region would be a formula for their own permanent marginalization and impoverishment. The other big loser would be all those Iraqis (surprisingly, a majority) who continue to believe in the idea of a united Iraq, and who are adamantly opposed to Iranian domination.

For this reason, the bargain between ISCI and the Kurds (codified in the 2005 constitution) cannot be the basis of a stable and democratic Iraq. It leaves out two crucial sections of the population: first, the Sunni Arabs, and second, a majority of Iraq's Shia as well, who fought Iran in a bloody eight-year war in the 1980s and do not want their territory to become a satellite of Iran's Islamic Republic. If the United States were to withdraw from an Iraq configured along these lines, civil war would almost certainly follow. It would pit an ISCI-dominated government in the south and in Baghdad, backed by Iran, against a loose coalition of Sunni Arab and Shiite nationalist resistance, backed by Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and other Sunni Arab states in the region alarmed by Iran's expanding power (which also includes a determined drive to acquire a nuclear weapons capacity). And in the chaos, there would also be a welter of more local-level fights for dominance.

The only way out of this nightmare scenario is a coherent, well-prepared, vigorous effort to broker a constitutional compromise before it is too late. The parameters of the necessary bargain have been clear for many years. ISCI would need to give up its ambition of a single, nine-province super-region, but could be granted a federal system with the eventual ability to lobby for creation of smaller regions (of up to three provinces each, as the interim Iraqi constitution had allowed for). The Kurds would get to keep their own region as part of a federal system, but the development of new oil fields would remain a prerogative mainly of the central government, not, as the Kurds and ISCI wish, regional governments. The Sunnis would have to reconcile themselves to being a minority political force in Iraq, but their provinces would be assured a fair and automatic distribution of the oil revenue, more or less in proportion to each province's share of the population.

There are a number of other issues to be worked out as well (including the reintegration of former Baathists below the top level into government, and the pruning of ISCI loyalists from the commanding ranks of the security forces, especially the police). But the pivotal elements of a deal involve the structure of the federal system and the control of oil production and distribution of its revenue.

The constitutional deal that is needed cannot be brokered by the United States alone. A "diplomatic surge" is urgently needed, in which the U.S. would partner with the UN and the European Union. For an administration that has been loathe to surrender control in Iraq, this is a difficult step, but without it, there will be no political breakthrough, and thus no exit from the quagmire.

In the context of such a grand bargain, the United States could draw down somewhat more gradually than Clinton and Obama now envision, perhaps getting down over the course of about three years to a small residual security force to protect American civilian operations in Iraq. If the provincial elections scheduled for this October can come off without massive intimidation and bloodshed, that will help, as it will likely deliver setbacks tin the south to ISCI and Dawa (who have governed poorly) and generate a more pluralistic political terrain, in which power in the Shiite south is shared by a more diverse set of actors.

It is far from clear that Iran, so close to winning its prize, would not sabotage such an outcome. Direct and intensive engagement with the Iranian regime would also be needed. This could offer the Iranians other incentives as part of a larger deal that would include verifiable suspension of their nuclear program. It could also play on the prospect of what they could themselves could face in an Iraq without the United States: a divided Shiite community, part of which is rising up in resistance to their dominance, allied with a united Sunni community with the broad backing of other Arab states in the region. And all of this before they had acquired the nuclear weapon they think will give a huge boost to their regional power.

A certain amount of brinksmanship would be needed to demonstrate to Iran that the alternative to compromise in Iraq is that they could wind up trading places with us, being bled and drained in an insurgent war while their enemies score opportunistic gains. In that case, the strategic prize could become an albatross around the neck of a regime that faces huge economic and political problems within Iran itself.

The above offers no sure path out of Iraq. Should diplomacy fail, we would be left with little choice but to prepare to withdraw, perhaps rapidly and in extremis, letting the regional actors and the Iraqis themselves pick up the pieces. It would be an ugly and costly scenario. But the credible threat of it might be the one thing that tips Iraq's polarized parties toward accommodation. And bad as it would be for a time, it could hardly be worse than having the United States bogged down in Iraq, desperately holding our military fingers in the dike for the decades that Senator McCain seems prepared to envision, while both our military capacity and our soft power drain away.

 
 

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Just because Senator Biden is on record as saying that he has no pride of authorship for his strategy to help put Iraq on course toward a sustainable political settlement doesn't give anyone carte blanche to go around reproducing the strategy without attribution...especially someone in a position to know better!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:51 PM on 04/13/2008

When will this blogger set the record straight and make the appropriate attribution to Senator Biden. We are waiting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 04/13/2008

Your solution appears to be, then:

'The only way out of this nightmare scenario is a coherent, well-prepared, vigorous effort to broker a constitutional compromise before it is too late. The parameters of the necessary bargain have been clear for many years. ISCI would need to give up its ambition of a single, nine-province super-region, but could be granted a federal system with the eventual ability to lobby for creation of smaller regions (of up to three provinces each, as the interim Iraqi constitution had allowed for). The Kurds would get to keep their own region as part of a federal system, but the development of new oil fields would remain a prerogative mainly of the central government, not, as the Kurds and ISCI wish, regional governments. The Sunnis would have to reconcile themselves to being minority...'

Why exactly would the 'several extant parties' agree to this? Why would Iran not simply overpower a nascent Shia regime? Turkey is always very anxious about an 'autonomous Kurdish region'. The Kurds are to NOT control the oil in their region? What do the Sunnis get out of this or any such deal? What this situation calls for is a Strong Man, to put things together again, obviously. Probably someone with excellent mustachios, to re-establish a strong central government. Sounds vaguely familiar.

(I could be wrong, but I don't think this is the Biden solution at all, which was 'break Iraq into 3
states', wasn't it?)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 04/11/2008

The Biden strategy is most definitely NOT about breaking Iraq into three states! Neither is it about partition, nor a US impostion, nor about dictating anything to the Iraqis. It's about federalism ie. a devolution of power from the central government to the regions as outlined in the Iraqi constitution and about providing a process whereby the warring Iraqi factions are brought together to hammer out a political accommodation with critical constitutional amendments that they can all live with.

The strategy cleverly reproduced by this blogger is what Senator Biden has developed over the course of the last three or four years and has been advocating for the better part of two years!

Most people are unaware of what Senator Biden's strategy is all about since their information is gleaned from one of three sources: the media (doesn't matter which part), the blogosphere (ditto) or the Bush administration.

The media and blogosphere don't understand the first thing about the Biden strategy - never have, never will - and they are certainly in no position to inform the public about it. The Bush administration is not about to do anything other than tread water long enough to hand this problem over to the next administration. They have long ago concluded that the situation in Iraq cannot be resolved and the best they can do is to prevent complete chaos until after their departure. If this isn"t a complete indictment of the Bush-CHENEY regime, I"m sure I don"t know what is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 PM on 04/11/2008

I found 'The Biden Plan' at...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/01/opinion/01biden.html

In part...

'The idea, as in Bosnia, is to maintain a united Iraq by decentralizing it, giving each ethno-religious group " Kurd, Sunni Arab and Shiite Arab " room to run its own affairs, while leaving the central government in charge of common interests. We could drive this in place with irresistible sweeteners for the Sunnis to join in, a plan designed by the military for withdrawing and redeploying American forces, and a regional nonaggression pact.'

The ONLY way this has a chance of happening is if he becomes Sec/State & he MAKES it happen, 'irresistible sweeteners' & all and the odds of sucess would still be TINY.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 04/12/2008

Doofus, you damn sure got that right! Stay tuned...Senator Biden will be delivering a major foreign policy and national security speech on Tuesday April 15th at Georgetown University that will outline the way forward in Iraq, among other things, after which, we'll all be wondering what on earth we did to deserve the likes of Obama/Clinton/McCain!

As for Biden being the SOS, here's how I see that shaking out...for reasons too numerous to get into here (a bloody 250 word limit!) the only way I see either Clinton or Obama ( of course this scenario works best for Obama - numerous reasons again) winning the general is if Biden is the Veep. As I see it, Biden should make his acceptance of that role dependent on the Iraq file being secured solely in his lap, no matter what the incoming SOS may have to say about it! That's the only way this deal gets done...unless, of course, a Biden/Hagel fusion ticket has a snowballs chance in Hell of materializing and Hagel has finally come on board with Biden's Iraq strategy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 PM on 04/12/2008

In some bizarro parallel universe, autonomous Kurdistan is thriving, except having to deal
with their obnoxious oil-poor neighbor Turkey. The Shia factions are happily adjusting to life
with Greater Iran. And the Sunni minority have re-joined their relatives in Kuwait, where they
wanted to be in the first place. And as for US, we are happily minding our own business
and paying $1.25 a gallon for gas, as Al Gore winds up his second term & 911 is still
just a phone number for emergencies, thanks to the ever vigilant NSA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 04/11/2008

Lt Gen Odum , ret, says "Rapid Withdrawal is the only solution. " http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/040408D.shtml
" ....The idea that US military trainers left alone in Iraq can be safe and effective is flatly rejected by several NCOs and junior officers I have heard describe their personal experiences. Moreover, training foreign forces before they have a consolidated political authority to command their loyalty is a windmill tilt.....
..........chaos will follow our withdrawal. We heard that argument as the "domino theory" in Vietnam. Even so, the path to political stability will be bloody regardless of whether we withdraw or not. The idea that the United States has a moral responsibility to prevent this ignores that reality. We are certainly to blame for it, but we do not have the physical means to prevent it. American leaders who insist that it is in our power to do so are misleading both the public and themselves if they believe it. The real moral question is whether to risk the lives of more Americans. Unlike preventing chaos, we have the physical means to stop sending more troops where many will be killed or wounded.
Third, nay sayers insist that our withdrawal will create regional instability. This confuses cause with effect. Our forces in Iraq and our threat to change Iran's regime are making the region unstable. Those who link instability with a US withdrawal have it exactly backwards. ...."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 04/11/2008

Post this!

Good Post....but I disagree that when a people are being occupied they will not try to kill the occupiers when they leave but only if they stay. If we announced a set date for withdrawl ...the violence would decrease ...it's logical. The tribal warfare that has been going on for centuries would sort itself out. To claim that we want to prevent ethnic cleansing and civil war is a lie. If we did we would have invaded Darfur. We are there for the oil revenues. What people here fail to realize is that Iran and Iraq are bound together by their religion Muslim...something our country isn't. All the Muslim nations in the Middle East s feel sympathetic to Iraq due to our imerialistic invasion. Of course they will help Iraq against us. The Iraqis know that anyone that we favor is just another puppet of the United States....we did it with Saddam and we haven't learned. They want us out and we should leave ASAP

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 04/11/2008

Good Post....but I disagree that when a people are being occupied they will not try to kill the occupiers when they leave but only if they stay. If we announced a set date for withdrawl ...the violence would decrease ...it's logical. The tribal warfare that has been going on for centuries would sort itself out. To claim that we want to prevent ethnic cleansing and civil war is a lie. If we did we would have invaded Darfur. We are there for the oil revenues. What people here fail to realize is that Iran and Iraq are bound together by their religion Muslim...something our country isn't. All the Muslim nations in the Middle East s feel sympathetic to Iraq due to our imerialistic invasion. Of course they will help Iraq against us. The Iraqis know that anyone that we favor is just another puppet of the United States....we did it with Saddam and we haven't learned. They want us out and we should leave ASAP

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 04/11/2008

Part 2

"We urgently need an exit strategy from Iraq, but it cannot simply be to declare we are leaving by some fixed, early date."

Why the hell not? Staying on makes policy sense if their is a reasonable prospect that we can achieve something worth the cost.. Your piece basically makes the case that the various Iraqi factions are going to have to come to some sort of accommodation before peace breaks out. You assert we have a capacity to influence the outcome in a way that is favorable to our national interest, but events indicate otherwise. The Iraqi factions can simply wait us out, pressuring the United States where they can, accepting favors when we offer them. Rope a dope. When we get tired and leave, the real business of nation building, regional style, can begin. Pretty much what we would do if the Iraqi's were occupying us. It will be ugly, and the outcome is not predictable. It may involve partitioning into three states. We broke it, we bought, we live with it. The most sensible policy is to contain the aftermath, something we are fairly good at.

"Even if we were to leave Iraq tomorrow, it would take years to rebuild, re-equip, and reset the American armed forces"

True enough, and it can't happen as long as we stay in Iraq. Important too, so let's start tomorrow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:19 AM on 04/11/2008

Part 1

What nonsense from the Hoover Inst. The way out of Iraq is to start leaving now.

To be REALLY fair Larry, their is no compelling evidence that the surge has lowered violence in Iraq or has caused any of the other modest improvements you cite. Levels of violence have ebbed and flowed throughout the occupation. Indeed, the surge was initially associated with a sustained up-tick in the body count (see the tables at http://icasualties.org/oif/. US casualties are trending up of late. The surge didn't elevate the number of boots on the ground by much, yet you claim was responsible for a 2/3 decline in loss of life. To be REALLY REALLY FAIR, a more logically compelling explanation is the money and influence we've been spreading around to the various Iraqi factions. The 180,000 additional Iraqi regular military, militia and police you cite are collecting paychecks, which makes them a lot less likely to work (overtly) for the insurgencies (plural intended). By contemporary Iraqi standards, we are creating a sizable middle class. Expedient in the short term, but of doubtful loyalty. As evidents in Basra recently showed, the Iraqi police and military aren't very good at their jobs

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:18 AM on 04/11/2008

A thoughtful comment. Barack setting a timetable before he even gets an intelligence report as President is a sign of his naivete.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 04/11/2008

What this writer establishes with crystal clarity is that Iraq is an opaque quagmire. Bush has created a mess, but must we clean it up? If we were able to clean up, what would we gain? I do not think we can clean it up, and, if we could, I do not see what we would gain. It is to our shame that we ever went in, but it would be to our greater shame to persist in a mistake. People will die whether we stay or go. We should have realized that before we went in. No more Americans should die for the mistake of an idiot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 04/11/2008

We didn't clean up Germany after WW1 and we got Hitler.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 AM on 04/11/2008

Wasn't it because of what's his names cease fire that the violence decreased?sadr, was it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 04/11/2008

1.) Agreed, the U.S. should try to be constructive, as it pulls out its occupation forces.

2.) Perhaps the situation in Iraq can be put into some perspective by comparing what has been happening, and what may continue to happen, in Iraq, with the American Civil War.

Over 600,000 Americans died in the U.S. Civil War. At the beginning, there was some thought given to intervention by Britain and France. Their motivation would have been economic (they desperately needed the South's cotton), not humanitarian, but one can conceive of the politicians of that day trying to justify their actions with polemics about a duty to a higher calling. As today's politicians talk about a duty to prevent the Iraqis from killing each other, Britain and France could have used a message that they were preventing the Americans from killing each other, and that they were giving them time to make peace peacefully.
It seems pretty obvious that the founding fathers' angst over involvement in foreign entanglements was well founded. We would do well to try to get along with other nations, letting them evolve naturally, from within, and not trying to force ourselves upon them at the end of a gun.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:37 AM on 04/11/2008

(continuing)
The matter of reconstruction, reparations and infrastructure building must be in the hands of the Shia and Kurds. Their goal must be to build a true nation there that will homogenize the people and end sectarian tensions.
By bifurcating efforts we can expect a self-interest balance among the warring factions.
The United States must then withdraw to guard the six oil pipelines and the banking in and out of the country so that the oil money flows through the Sunnis. We have seen that the Shia cannot resolve to treat the Sunnis fairly and this will otherwise perpetuate the civil war contrary to the method suggested by Gore.
The United States must then turn over the tasks the new exit strategy entails to the UN and get out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 AM on 04/11/2008

Al Gore, speaking of the objective vis-à-vis our extricating the United States from the Iraqi disaster, recently said [about our goal]: "To get our troops out of there as soon as possible while simultaneously observing the moral duty that all of us share " including those of us who opposed this war in the first instance " to remove our troops in a way that doesn"t do further avoidable damage to the people who live there."
Congress needs to first begin a debate on a resolution on the question of abandoning the goal of forcing the Iraqi Parliament to pass the Iraq Hydrocarbon Law and the expected Production Sharing Agreements that would greatly favor American oil companies. They can easily have a national consensus about that.
Democratic candidates must begin demanding that the United States tilt in favor of the Sunnis to handle the oil revenues of Iraq. They, the Sunni, would then have to work out the sharing arrangements with the Shia and Kurds to get the oil out of the ground.

(More)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 AM on 04/11/2008

Iran? Iran?
The cold war is over. We need an enemy.
Iran?
Close the occupation down.
Talk to Jordan Syria, and IRAN.
Billions of $ going to , not Iraq, but to KBR Hallilburton, and Blackwater.
War industries in the US are doing great.
Iraqi's have no drinking water or electricity. Four million of them (mostly the educated and wealthy) are gone. Left the country.
Let's forget about creating a new country in the middle east , and let the people create their own.
We are not the liberators. We are the occupiers.
Get out!
Forget about the oil.
Let's spend the $ here on renewable energy.
Iraq will sort itself out.
If not .
We can just bomb the shit out of them.
WTF.
Give it up!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 AM on 04/11/2008

I would like someone to tell the Kansas veterans how being in Iraq is protecting Kansas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 04/11/2008

You have got to be kidding "...but rather rigidity and the psychology of preparing for an imminent civil war." Guess what a civil war is raging in Iraq now! What is galling is that the reason that the surge is working is the US military has helped to supply weapons to the religious factions and, the different sects have done their ethnic cleansing and staked out their bit of real estate. The illusion that the troop surge - (which has been bolstered by an excessive amount of Blackwater forces) - has been successful will diminish once the various sects seek out more real estate; which will happen whether we stay or leave. Everyone will want control of the water resources, the arable lands and oil rich areas and the ongoing civil war will exacerbate.

p.s.
we do not need to announce a date for withdrawal - the Iraqis are not stupid - as the troop levels diminish it will be noticable - despite the sophmoric ranting of the republicans, "that if we announce a date for withdrawal we will be announcing to the world that it will be open season for anarchy," whether it's announced or not the Iraqis, the world, will know when we leave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 AM on 04/11/2008

I am confused. I just read your bio and I am wondering how on earth you could write such a blog and not give credit to the developer of the strategy for a political solution in Iraq that you outline here. I cannot believe that you are unaware of the Biden strategy.

While Senator Biden has said that he has no pride of ownership over this plan, I do look forward to your explanation for reproducing the essential elements of the Biden strategy here without any attribution, whatsoever!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 04/10/2008

That's what I used to say just from a moral viewpoint. There is no morality left except to stop being a part of killing people.. The only "acceptable" course it to offer a blank check to the UN and participate as requested - with a big mea culpa. But that will never happen.

Slavery is a monstrous stain on this country. So is "nation-building" without regard to the effects on the pre-fabricated human "pieces" involved . Or how about punishing the Cuban people over half a century for Castro. Democracy seems to be a spiteful, pissy little bitch when pisants are in charge. Funny if it weren't so tragic for so many. Pretty good for most of us so far, though. Does anybody else hear chickens approaching?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 PM on 04/10/2008

I wonder if you realize that this is essentially the strategy that Senator Biden has developed over the course of the last three or more years and which has already received the support of an overwhelming an unprecedented majority of Republicans and Democrats in the US Senate and House, and which has also received the unofficial endorsement of the permanent five members of the UN Security Council. And, more importantly, most of Iraq's sectarian leaders are also on board with this plan as they realize it is the only way forward that will keep Iraq united. For this reason, Turkey has also come around to support the Biden strategy.

And so, I'd be interested in knowing what you think about the Biden strategy to promote and facilitate a sustainable political settlement in Iraq based on federalism, as outlined in Iraq's constitution. In its very essence, the Biden strategy provides a process or mechanism to bring the warring Iraqi factions to the negotiating table to hammer out a political accommodation that they could all live with, literally. The regional and major powers would be included in the process to support and secure whatever settlement the Iraqis are able to achieve. Such a process would occur under the auspices of the United Nations but would most certainly require strong and competent US leadership.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 PM on 04/10/2008

And, just a final comment on Senator Biden's Iraq strategy...

Of course, if such a process is not initiated or if the Iraqis are simply unable to make the necessary compromises and constitutional amendments that would be required to reach a sustainable power-sharing arrangement, then the US would have no option but to get out, ASAP. This withdrawal would necessarily include both US troops and US civilians (say 'good-bye' to that monstrosity known as an embassy), as well as all Iraqis who have risked their lives to assist coalition forces. And, if it comes to this, we can only hope that it won' t be a repeat of Saigon and that the back-up containment strategy works to prevent an unpredictable regional conflagration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 04/10/2008

Thank you LizM,

While I was reading this,I too knew it was Biden's plan. I was waiting for him to give Biden credit.

I did notice the words diplomatic surge in quotation marks,I believe Biden said that as well. Still no credit.

I can't believe that Joe didn't get the votes to stay in the race.I beleive we need him in a more powerful position. Let's hope this happens in the next administration.

Just think, Biden had to drop out for not giving credit to someone while giving a speech,Mr. Diamond doesn't have to worry about that. He just has to worry about the Biden supporters that still beleive in his plan,his ideas,and his desire to bring our troops home safely.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 AM on 04/11/2008

LizM and maherforpresident,

Thank you for pointing this out. You are indeed correct.

The failure by the Bush Administration to undertake a "diplomatic surge" of any kind throughout this entire ordeal is indeed baffling. Mobilizing everyone's self interest at the bargaining table is the only viable course to try to establish a rational solution. If no one is rational, then endless war will produce absolutely nothing but death, destruction, and ruin for all.

The economy of the United States is now at stake.

When will rational people prevail?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 AM on 04/11/2008

I know you know this...but just to make sure the record is clear...because most people around here STILL don't understand the truth of the matter concerning that Neil Kinnock thing back in 1988...

Senator Biden gave a speech, several times throughout that presidential campaign, in which he quoted the British Labour Party leader, WITH attribution. However, during ONE speech he failed to attribute the same quote to Kinnock.

Now, people are free to say what they will about this mistake, but to call it plagiarism reflects only on their own lack of moral character and profound ignorance on this issue.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 AM on 04/11/2008

Everyone knows (or should know) that at the fastest we could withdraw, it would take 18 months. There's a whole lot of people and equipment that needs to be moved for one thing. The key is to withdraw in an orderly fashion.<