« Quote For The Day | Main | Rauch on Iraq » 08 Sep 2007 12:37 pm Surging For Partition?Charles Krauthammer officially throws in the towel on Iraq as a unified democratic country for the foreseeable future. But that doesn't mean, in his view, that we should peremptorily withdraw. In fact, he's arguing for US forces to help police the three separate mini-states that have emerged out of the chaos. It's the most plausible pro-surge piece I've yet read, because it concedes that putting Iraq back together is largely hopeless, but that some kind of tactical stability is not impossible:
The weak link in the argument, I'd say, is the notion that Sunni Anbar won't try to regain control of the Shiite center. Or that Baghdad itself won't explode. The other obvious inference that Charles doesn't address in the column: If we really do want to put enough troops in to create stability, then we shouldn't just be stabilizing the surge but increasing it. How many troops does he envisage for how many years? 100,000 for twenty? Let's be as honest as we can, can we? TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e54eee241b8834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Surging For Partition?' |
