The Surge: Qualified Success or Unqualified Failure
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Posted By: www.MoronInCharge.com Posted on: Jan. 8, 2008 at 10:43 PM |
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Congressman Robert Wexler published this opinion piece at The Daily Kos today. It perfectly summarizes my views on the "surge," and I challenge the conservatives at VONA to explain this fantastic accomplishment to me.
A Surge of More Lies
by Congressman Robert Wexler
A new troubling myth has taken hold in Washington and it is critical that the record is set straight. According to the mainstream media, Republicans, and unfortunately even some Democrats, the President's surge in Iraq has been a resounding success. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.
This assertion is disingenuous, factually incorrect, and negatively impacts America's national security. The Surge had a clear and defined objective - to create stability and security - enabling the Iraqi government to enact lasting political solutions and foster genuine reconciliation and cooperation between Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds.
This has not happened.
There has been negligible political progress in Iraq, and we are no closer to solving the complex problems - including a power sharing government, oil revenue agreement and new constitution - than we were before the Administration upped the ante and sent 30,000 more troops to Iraq.
Too many Democrats in Congress are again surrendering to General Petraeus and have failed to challenge the Bush Administration's claims that the surge has been successful. In fact -- it is just the opposite.
The reduction in violence in Iraq has exposed the continuing failure of Iraqi officials to solve their substantial political rifts. By President Bush's own stated goal of political progress, the Surge has failed.
Of course raising troop levels has increased security - a strategy the Bush administration ignored when presented by General Shinseki before the war in Iraq began - but the fundamental internal Iraqi problems remain and the factors that were accelerating the civil war in 2007 have simply been put on hold.
The military progress is a testament to the patience and dedication of our brave troops - even in the face of 15 month-long deployments followed by insufficient Veteran's health services when they return home. They have performed brilliantly - despite the insult of having President Bush recently veto a military spending bill that enhanced funding and benefits, and increased care.
Despite the efforts of American soldiers, the surge alone cannot bring about the political solutions needed to end centuries of sectarian divide.
As it stands, little on the ground supports the assertion that Iraqis are ready to stand up and govern themselves. Too few Iraqi troops are trained, equipped and combat ready, and they cannot yet provide adequate security. Loyalty is also an issue in the Iraqi army as Al Queda and Sunni insurgents infliltrate their defense forces. The consequences turned deadly just recently when an Iraqi soldier purposely killed two U.S. troops.
On the streets of Baghdad and Mosul, the Sunni and Shia factions have paused their fighting, awaiting guarantees and protections that have not yet been delivered. As Iraqi refugees return, there is no mechanism to help them rebuild their lives, nor recover their now-occupied homes. Neighborhoods once mixed are now segregated.
In Northern Iraq, Kurdish terrorists conducting nefarious operations across the border into Turkey have compelled our NATO ally to strike at bases, inflaming tensions between Baghdad and Ankara.
The surge is working? We suffered more U.S. casualties in 2007 than in any other year of the war. We can't afford any more of this type of success.
How can we create the situation that is most likely to deliver political progress in Iraq? Not by continuing the surge and occupation. Our best chance (there is no guarantee) is by putting real pressure on the Iraqi government to force action. Telling the national and local Iraqi leaders that we are withdrawing our troops can help accomplish this goal. Today, the majority Iraqi Shia government led by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has little incentive to act when American troops remain in the country to provide security and stability.
Based on the Administration's plan, John McCain's proposal of a 100-year US occupation could be a reality!
The Democratic Congress must act aggressively to first cut off funding for the surge and then the entire war. Many of my colleagues avoided a showdown with the administration because they mistakenly believed such a fight would endanger the safety of the troops.
In fact, we must accept that every soldier killed or injured in the coming months should have already been home. Every billion dollars of war-appropriations we spend from here on should have been spent on genuine priorities here at home such as children's heath care.
Enough is enough: While the Administration over-commits American forces in Iraq, we see Al Qaeda-regrouping and Osama Bin Laden still at large. We remain seriously bogged down in Afghanistan, and are witnessing a crisis in Pakistan that has left a nuclear country on the brink of a meltdown. America's resources and attention are desperately needed elsewhere and our soldiers must no longer be needlessly sacrificed as we wait for Iraqis to stand up.
The Surge has failed. If my colleagues gullibly accept the moving rationale for the Surge, just as so many have for the war itself, we will have failed as well.
Comments:
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Jan. 8, 2008 at 11:48:02 PM
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| The truth is that after the US death toll started going thru the roof, after the surge, The White House and Emperor s***forbrains needed another way to fix Iraq. So they began appeasing the Sunni Terrorists, forming them into "Concerned Local Citizens" brigades, that provided local security. This reduced the violence. But the reality is that we are paying the terrorists cash-money to not kill our troops. What happens when the money stops? Also, the violence is down, to the pre surge levels. It isn't gone. We've created 2 million refugees, and 2.5 mil internal refugees. And how many have been allowed into the USA, as people seeking asylum? 200? 400? 1000? Your next 7-11 clerk is today trying to blow up our brothers and sons. |
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Jan. 9, 2008 at 01:03:20 AM
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| Yes, we seem to be rejoicing about a death toll that is 1/3rd of what it was this time last year. But 23 U.S. soldiers and 548 Iraqi Security Forces and civilians died last month. This is the "peace" that ethnic cleansing, paying off insurgents, and $500 billion has bought us? So around election time, when the police crack down on the whores on Van Buren, do the girls become secretaries, or do they lay low or move their business to another part of town? Is the air in China really getting cleaner in preparation for the Olympics later this year, or are the soot-belching trucks temporarily detoured around Beijing so the city looks just a little less opaque. In all these cases, one must be aware of the difference between real improvement, and the self-serving illusion of progress that helps politicians stay in power. Every US soldier and innocent Iraqi that dies between now and our inevitable withdraw from Iraq is a person whole died because Americans were fed the illusion and false hope of a magic surge to put it all right again. This "surge" was supposed to buy time, so the Iraqi government could get their act together and produce a long-lasting solution that didn't require a perpetual American presence and sacrifice. We are no close to that now than we were last year. If I have a treatment that kills one half a cancer, that is not a cure. At best it buys time. The tumor still spreads. Without the operation to take out the tumor while it is remains resectable, the patient still dies. But even that is not a good analogy. A better one would be treating a fever, while the infection still kills you. |
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Jan. 9, 2008 at 01:08:50 AM
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| Second paragraph, first sentence: meant to say "person who died" Second paragraph, last sentence: meant to say "We are no closer" |
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Jan. 9, 2008 at 07:42:47 AM
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| Not everyone has let the 'Surge' drop through the cracks.... Once with the "Mission Accomplished", stuff a cucumber wrapped in aluminium foil in your flight suit, photo op on a carrier carefully positioned to deceive the viewer into thinking the carrier was actually 'out to sea'. And now with the "Victory of the Surge" in finally FREEING the OILraqis, installing Democracy and freedom and getting them the clean water and electricity that they had before our INVASION and OCCUPATION of their country.
I want to add one myth to his list, the one I find most galling and least debunked: that the surge has led to the pacification of large parts of Anbar province and Baghdad. Quiescence and pacification are simply not the same thing, and this is definitely a case of quiescence. In fact, the reduction in violence we are witnessing is really a result of the U.S. discontinuing its vicious raids into insurgent territory, which have been - from the beginning of the war - the largest source of violence and civilian casualties in Iraq. These raids, which consist of home invasions in search of suspected insurgents, trigger brutal arrests and assaults by American soldiers who are worried about resistance, gun fights when families resist the intrusions into their homes, and road side bombs set to deter and distract the invasions. Whenever Iraqis fight back against these raids, there is the risk of sustained gun battles that, in turn, produce U.S. artillery and air assaults that, in turn, annihilate buildings and even whole blocks. The "surge" has reduced this violence, but not because the Iraqis have stopped resisting raids or supporting the insurgency. Violence has decreased in many Anbar towns and Baghdad neighborhoods because the U.S. has agreed to discontinue these raids; that is, the U.S. would no longer seek to capture or kill the Sunni insurgents they have been fighting for four years. In exchange the insurgents agree to police their own neighborhoods (which they had been doing all along, in defiance of the U.S.), and also suppress jihadist car bombs. The result is that the U.S. troops now stay outside of previously insurgent communities, or march through without invading any houses or attacking any buildings. So, ironically, this new success has not pacified these communities, but rather acknowledged the insurgents' sovereignty over the communities, and even provided them with pay and equipment to sustain and extend their control over the communities. Hey, but that is just one of many myths that need debunking. Cole has 10 others that are just as worthy. Best Michael
Not to mention: Where there is a running tab.....
Yes, civilian deaths are down, but police deaths, government deaths, and death of US allies in Oilraq are not down. The US military has stopped going door to door in the middle of the night destroying houses and feeling up Muslim women in their night clothes. They are bombing again semi-randomly from the air again, safe far up in the sky or safely away from most of the action. The US militaray is now PAYING the insurgents to police their own territories, which they were against the occupations before we started paying them...
Anyone who is surprised about LIES and DECEPTION about the surge, in light of the LIES and DECEPTION of the INVASION and OCCUPATION are fools...... |
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Jan. 9, 2008 at 09:05:11 AM
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| Out of some 25 million people in Oilraq, one-fifth are either dead or displaced. Approx 1 million have been killed. link:[www.justforeignpolicy.org] Approx 2.2 million have left the country People who lived peacefully as next door neighbors, have now been artifically seperated and each now FEAR going out of their segregated little regions.
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Jan. 9, 2008 at 09:36:58 AM
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| You're correct Adam. You did bring it up first in an article, and your comment on that article was excellent. But I want to flesh this out a bit. Surely Republicans think the surge has been fabulous based on the news reports, and I want to know why. After all, I might have to choose between Clinton-McCain or Obama-McCain, and McCain would be happy enough if the surge in its present form lasted a thousand years. The only neocon to comment on your provocative article was postman, and all he did was cut and paste a headline about "American jihadist" Adam Gadahn (and so very cleverly insinuated that Gadahn was you because of the shared first name). So someone, please convince me why the "surge" is working and "surge" cheerleader McCain is my man.
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Jan. 10, 2008 at 11:42:50 AM
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I am a filthy spammer, I deserve to be castrated in front of a live televised audience... Thanks for listening to me.
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Jan. 10, 2008 at 11:56:45 AM
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I am a filthy spammer, I deserve to be castrated in front of a live televised audience... Thanks for listening to me.
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Jan. 10, 2008 at 01:44:29 PM
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| I thought that this "surge" was supposedly done to get a quieting of the violence so that the Iraqis themselves can forge thier own destiny. If sending more soldiers into BAGHDAD was to quiet the violence in BAGHDAD, they have accomplished the goal indeed. However, there is probably more sectarianism on the streets and in the govenance itself to make the coming together for reconciliation between the factions than there was before. Arming one side of the problem to quiet the violence, and paying that same side not to fight Americans has taken on the apperence of Americans "taking a side" is probably against our own best interests, as we have seen time and time again. The last time we created our own enemy was tring to repel the Soviets from Afganistan. Of course our military has done thier job. From now on, it is not a job for any military, but for the Iraqis. Therefore, the policy behind the "surge" has failed. Time to try something new. Let us not forget the intent of the "surge" when we grade it's success. Let us not forget that the policy behind this "surge" has failed, and may be worse than it was before. So, the "glowing reviews" that the press are giving the gullible American people is all flash, unless it was all a lie and the surge was one, or both of these things. Firstly, changing the conversation from reducing "pre surge" troop levels to a purposeful escalation, then reducing the escalation to "pre surge" levels to make it seem as if it is a reduction in troop levels. Something like the price of gasoline. They raise it until we complain, then lower it, but not as low as it was before. Then raise it again, but higher than it was when we complained the first time until we complain and so forth. Well, you all get the picture. Secondly, it could be that we are gearing up to occupy Iraq in some form, and this is a "sweeping" of objectionable elements, and the building of a groundworks of "favorable" elements to do so. In other words, they stay until they either "insert" the proper governace, or get a governance dependant on American occupation. The bad thing is, our policy makers keep thinking in American terms, as if all people are like Americans. As we can see, time and time again, this thinking has alot to do with the policy being doomed from the start. Changing this type of thought process might be the first step in healing the wounds of this continuous conflict between the west, and the people of the middle east. Unless peace was never the intent in the first place. I certianly hope it is not. |
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