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Salamantis
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Al-Qaeda In Iraq Reported Crippled
« on: 2007-10-16 00:26:26 »
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MoEnzyme
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The Absurdities of "Good News" in Iraq
« Reply #1 on: 2007-10-26 12:53:04 »
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The Absurdities of "good news" in Iraq.

Nevermind that there was no significant Al Qeda presence in Iraq before the US invaded, destroyed its Infrastracture, and killed millions Iraqis who had nothing to do with 9/11 . . . that is  HISTORY. Now that we've taken Al Qeda down a notch there we can declare victory and let the crippled Iraqis clean up the crippled Al Qeda in Iraq. After all we did them a favor right?

http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.cms.support.viewStory.cls?mid=6954

Declare victory in Iraq

The surge has succeeded, so bring the troops home


Published: Friday, October 26, 2007


The latest news out of Iraq is so good — relatively speaking — that it offers President Bush a face-saving opportunity to declare victory and bring the troops home. What better way to counter claims that the president had taken his eye off the ball in Iraq in order to prepare for war with Iran?

If current trends hold, October will record the second consecutive monthly decline in U.S. military and Iraqi civilian deaths. But that’s not all. The Washington Post recently reported that “The U.S. military believes it has dealt devastating and perhaps irreversible blows to al-Qaeda in Iraq in recent months, leading some generals to advocate a declaration of victory over the group.”

So declare away. The surge is a success. Start the soldiers packing and let’s be off, because it may not get any better than this.

As of Tuesday, the Pentagon reported 28 U.S. military deaths in October, an average of about 1.2 deaths a day. The U.S. toll hasn’t been this low since March 2006, when 31 soldiers died, an average of one death a day.

Iraqi civilian deaths have dropped by more than half in just two months, but that improvement is tempered by the still-staggering number of ordinary Iraqis being killed every week. The current pace of civilian deaths would put October at less than 900. That’s down from 1,023 deaths in September and 1,956 in August, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq is on the run, U.S. generals say, largely because Sunni Iraqis have joined American soldiers in the fight. In Anbar province and other former insurgent strongholds, Iraqi cooperation with U.S. forces has helped to scatter al-Qaeda fighters and disrupt their operations. One military intelligence source told The Post that Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, head of the Joint Special Operations Command in Iraq, believes that al-Qaeda in Iraq has been all but eliminated.

It’s wise to make the most of any good news that comes our way in Iraq. Spend too long worrying about context and a new rash of suicide bombings could wipe out the only metric that’s meaningful to the American people now: body counts.

The needle hasn’t moved much on other substantive measures of progress. Political reconciliation isn’t happening. A new report by the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction warns that Iraq “will require years of steady engagement” before there is significant progress in providing Iraqis with power and clean water, jobs, health resources and government that works.

The Iraqi judicial system is crippled by corruption and sectarian intimidation. Unemployment is rampant, utility services unreliable and reconstruction projects are grinding to a halt due to lack of maintenance or a shortage of workers. The lights are on in Baghdad only seven hours a day.

But enough of the negative news. There has been almost five years of that. Time for a round of half-full glasses.

The other inducement Bush has to get out of Iraq while the getting is good is the universal motivator: money. The Congressional Budget Office reported Wednesday that the taxpayers’ tab for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could run between $1.7 trillion and $2.4 trillion over the next decade. “We are on an unsustainable fiscal path and something has to give,” CBO Director Peter Orszag testified to the House Budget Committee.

So give Iraq back to the Iraqis. Because if Bush insists that U.S. troops can’t leave Iraq when deaths are declining and al-Qaeda is in retreat, then he’s saying they can never leave.

And sign here to endorse his $2.4 trillion check.

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