« Clinton's February Fundraising | Main | What Didn't Work » 21 Mar 2008 02:18 pm Strategizing Against al QaedaIncreasingly I hear that even if it were in the West's interests to leave Iraq, al Qaeda would consider it a victory, be emboldened and grow stronger. This is a core part of McCain's message, as if a complicated war against a Wahhabist terror franchise, a Shiite regional power and a myriad other, constantly shifting cross-currents can be reduced in this fashion with any great enlightenment. Obviously, the morale of the enemy matters; and bin Laden himself has cited Iraq as a key battle ground. But it is important not to have our strategy actually dictated by bin Laden. Matt makes a similar point today:
I'm not as sanguine as Matt about the consequences of withdrawal. But I do think there is one force Sunni al Qaeda may hate as much as the West: Shiite Iran. And vice-versa. One classic way to advance our interests in a situation like this is to let them fight each other and get out of the way. Al Qaeda has tended to lose support when it targets other Muslim Arabs. And the Iraq-Iran war kept two monstrous regimes busy with their own battle for quite a long time. Why not fly-trap themselves? TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e5516317ec8833 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Strategizing Against al Qaeda' |
