« The View From Your Window | Main | Christianist Democrats » 29 Apr 2007 01:19 pm The Exit and AnbarRepublicans are beginning to realize that fundamental change in the current strategy in Iraq is needed if they aren't to face electoral collapse next year. My money is on John Warner forcing redeployment by the fall if only to save the U.S. military from being chewed up entirely by one war. Bottom line from my Sunday Times column today:
The encouraging news from Anbar, where al Qaeda has out-stayed its welcome among the local tribes, does not undermine this fact. What Anbar shows is that relative peace and stability will come only when Iraqis themselves, for reasons of their own, defend their own country from al Qaeda's poison. We can and should continue to help them in any way we can. But the more they take the lead in defending their own country the better. Even in Anbar, however, the "national" government remains a problem, since the Sunni tribes don't trust the Shiites in Baghdad (with good reason). The answer, it seems to me, will be gradual US withdrawal and redeployment to Kurdistan, and a soft, informal partition that gives each ethnic and religious group enough autonomy to have something to fight for. If this war ends with a messy soft-partition, but in which various groups of Iraqi Muslims start to take on the war against al Qaeda for their own sake, it could still end up as a relative success. We will have precipitated a situation in which the real war here - within Islam, between mainstream Islam and al Qaeda - will finally be joined. We should do all we can to help from a distance, maybe even a small distance. But this is their fight not ours. We cannot win it; only they can. Our goal should not be our victory against al Qaeda; it should be their victory against al Qaeda. It will only be their victory if we are clearly on the road out. If that happens, we change the narrative of this war decisively - in our favor. But indefinite occupation prevents that scenario from taking place. Ending the occupation and winning the war, in other words, are not opposites. They can be complements. It's a tricky process, but by far the most feasible now on the table. (Photo: Iraq's al-Anbar province tribe leader Abdel Sattar Abu Risha greets new US commander in Iraq General David Petraeus in Ramadi 13 March 2007. Petraeus met with tribes' leaders after touring US and Iraqi units fighting Al-Qaeda in almost daily street battles in the city, much of which lies in ruins. By Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty.) TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200d834dd2cec53ef Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'The Exit and Anbar'
In Anbar the Seeds of Hope are Sown
In Anbar the Seeds of Hope are Sown |

