October 11, 2007
Mission Accomplished?
Bartle Bull in Prospect:
The great question in deciding whether to keep fighting in Iraq is not about the morality and self-interest of supporting a struggling democracy that is also one of the most important countries in the world. The question is whether the war is winnable and whether we can help the winning of it. The answer is made much easier by the fact that three and a half years after the start of the insurgency, most of the big questions in Iraq have been resolved. Moreover, they have been resolved in ways that are mostly towards the positive end of the range of outcomes imagined at the start of the project. The country is whole. It has embraced the ballot box. It has created a fair and popular constitution. It has avoided all-out civil war. It has not been taken over by Iran. It has put an end to Kurdish and marsh Arab genocide, and anti-Shia apartheid. It has rejected mass revenge against the Sunnis. As shown in the great national votes of 2005 and the noisy celebrations of the Iraq football team's success in July, Iraq survived the Saddam Hussein era with a sense of national unity; even the Kurds—whose reluctant commitment to autonomy rather than full independence is in no danger of changing—celebrated. Iraq's condition has not caused a sectarian apocalypse across the region. The country has ceased to be a threat to the world or its region. The only neighbours threatened by its status today are the leaders in Damascus, Riyadh and Tehran.
More here.
Posted by Abbas Raza at 05:43 PM | Permalink






Comments
The mother of all Pyrrhic victories.
Remind me again, which has the greater number of victims, the Armenian Genocide or the Iraq war.
Posted by: Persse | Oct 11, 2007 8:03:48 PM
The Armenian genocide. The most conservative estimates of Turkey's scholars yield 300,000 deaths, while the critical Iraq Body Count lists something between 75,000 and 82,000 deaths. That, and the Iraq War is conducted with a goal other than "Eliminate all of the Iraqis."
I do hope you made that comparison out of ignorance.
Posted by: anonymous | Oct 12, 2007 12:43:34 AM
No, not ignorance. Just looking at the totals; the sanctions era, military violence, breakdown of society, ethnic cleansing, the Lancet study, the millions of refugees, cholera, malnutrition, you name it. But hey, the Armenians didn't have any oil. Not that as a victim of racist violence it really matters.
Posted by: Persse | Oct 12, 2007 8:07:08 AM
You two are why public message boards always devolve into tedium. Please note that the article had nothing to do with Armenia and Turkey.
Posted by: Greg S | Oct 12, 2007 10:37:48 AM
Thank you Greg.
Posted by: eric | Oct 12, 2007 11:17:41 AM
Post a comment