Whether we stay or leave, it's pretty clear what we're doing now isn't working.If we leave, we'll expedite the creation of a spawning ground for a new generation of terrorists. If we stay, we'll delay this event at the cost of soldiers' lives. For either scenario, we need a new plan.My idea is to break the country up along cultural lines. This goes against American ideals of freedom and equality (ha, ha, yeah I know), but I think it'll buy us some short-term stability to create a more focused diplomatic plan.What do you all think?
6/17/2007 1:26:41 AM
I think it sucks that the shi'ites and kurds have all the oil and the sunnis hardly have any
6/17/2007 1:31:04 AM
6/17/2007 1:41:47 AM
6/17/2007 1:48:03 AM
6/17/2007 2:12:16 AM
going in was a retarded idea to start, i totally predicted this shit like 4 years ago
6/17/2007 2:35:15 AM
^ True, but blaming Bush at this point does nothing to protect us from the problems that will arise.
6/17/2007 2:38:13 AM
isnt there some addage about not forgetting the past or you will relive it?well the more we criticize bush, the more people wont make this mistake again
6/17/2007 2:39:36 AM
nothing will workand it's been hard for me to come to grips with that because i really thought that dividing it into 3 states would workbut if you think about it, all that does is just nationalize the civil war. instead of a civil war it becomes a war between 3 nations, not to mention iran meddling in iti can only imagine the stress the policy makers are under trying to manage this thing
6/17/2007 2:46:27 AM
thats the part that sucks, is there is no way out. we have dug a hole and cant get out of it. all options suck
6/17/2007 2:51:41 AM
6/17/2007 2:55:59 AM
yes they will
6/17/2007 2:59:17 AM
^^ foo me once, shame on you, foo me twice ... won't get fooled again.
6/17/2007 3:02:59 AM
joe schmoe i have a question for you if you dont mindtoday me and my parents had a political talk convo and my stepdad was like i'd vote for a republican that wasnt such a war hawk...do you think giving republicans a "war hawk" stereotype is fair?
6/17/2007 3:08:20 AM
6/17/2007 3:29:05 AM
lol wtf do people consider a defeat anyways?imo, we have been defeated already...anything else is just insult to injury
6/17/2007 3:36:26 AM
well we won the war part, we just lost the occupation and reconstruction.
6/17/2007 5:25:12 AM
thats just something republicans say
6/17/2007 5:33:50 AM
militarily speaking its true
6/17/2007 5:36:55 AM
To see how bad it really is, read this:The uniformed kidnappers of Baghdad http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6756425.stmTERRIBLE.Basically shows how people in Iraqi police uniforms are behind a lot of the kidnappings and murders. Some of them really *are* policemen, but have loyalties with someone else, and some are just wearing the uniforms, because the uniforms give them access to any place.See this:
6/17/2007 8:58:31 AM
These are the headlines on http://www.antiwar.com: US: 60% of Baghdad Not Controlled Problems Deepen for Iraqi Prime Minister Blair Knew US Had No Post-War Plan for Iraq Maliki Asks US Troops to Resist Arming Iraqi Tribes Saturday: 2 GIs, 1 British Soldier, 26 Iraqis Killed; 40 Iraqis Wounded Here is the first one:http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070616/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraqU.S.: 60 pct of Baghdad not controlled
6/17/2007 10:25:28 AM
The only reason it is unwinnable is because of restraints that we've placed on ourselves. If you want to eliminate the enemy, then that's what you do. You don't hamstring yourself with safe havens and political hand-wringing over collateral damage. Unfortunately, no one has the political sack to do so and Iraq continues to drag on in a half-assed manner.
6/17/2007 10:40:25 AM
I'm not convinced that there's any way to "fix" Iraq. We shouldn't have gone there in the first place imo, but that's a moot point. But I think that no matter what we do, we're going to wind up on the losing side. If we don't "finish the job" and leave before order and peace is fully cemented, we'll look like pricks and Iraq will be pissed at us for coming in, screwing everything up, and then just leaving. As others have said, it will just spawn more generations of anti-American terrorists. But if we stay, we'll continue to stir up the hornet's nest that is the Middle East, which does nothing to stop the anti-American sentiment. And we'll still look like pricks because we're obviously not trying to bring democracy to these people (as if they even asked for us to give them democracy and free them from an oppressive regime), we're just trying to install a puppet government that's pro-American and will sell us their oil.I know I become master of the obvious by saying that there is no easy fix for Iraq, but there's no point in ignoring the facts. No matter what we do, we're just going to piss a whole lot of people off. A good place to start this country's redemption would be getting Dubya out of office, but even that's too little too late, considering that he was voted into office a second time despite how he handled things during his first term.Bottom line: we've fucked ourselves in the ass, and no matter what happens we're going to fuck ourselves even harder.
6/17/2007 11:43:31 AM
No one outside of the US really gives a shit that Bush is in office. Him leaving means next to nothing in terms of "redemption." Don't be an idiot.
6/17/2007 12:05:56 PM
The middle east will always be a terrible place, unless some blows the entire area up.
6/17/2007 12:27:41 PM
6/17/2007 12:47:29 PM
6/17/2007 2:36:07 PM
I haven't kept up as much with Arab opinion on this, but what does Arab opinion think is the best way to fix Iraq? I get the impression that the political elite are rather nervous about a sudden withdrawal: as much as they hate the US presence in Iraq, I think most are realizing that a sudden American withdrawal is going to leave a full fledged civil war that can easily spiral into a greater regional conflict. I think that even Iran understands that a continued American presence without some sort of political framework for stability is going to be bad for them in the long run, dragging then into a potential full scale war between Sh'ia and Sunni Iraqis. Yet at the same time, our continued presence there is obviously not doing the nation any good.Just as bad is the potential for an independent Kurdish state. If they decide to go on their own, it's going to add a new ethnic factor that the Turks, Iranians, and Syrians do not want to deal with. Things are bad enough as is, but there's no reason to have their Kurdish minorities dreaming of joining up with greater Kurdistan.
6/17/2007 2:40:10 PM
6/17/2007 4:26:59 PM
If it takes more collateral damage than enemy casualties, then that's what it takes. It's called war. Everyone has this misconception of war as a precision activity. It's not.I'm not making a case for or against war. I'm simply saying that if you declare war, you should be prepared to bring overwhelming force and you should be prepared for it to get messy. If you're not prepared to do those things, then you're not ready for war. If you decide to go to war anyways, you're going to lose.Notice that those who are winning in Iraq (the insurgents) are willing to do what it takes to win. Those who are losing spend their time complaining about how fucked up and unfair suicide bombers and IEDs are.[Edited on June 17, 2007 at 5:02 PM. Reason : ]
6/17/2007 5:00:03 PM
6/17/2007 6:02:45 PM
i always wondered this. say they hide shit like bomb factories and what not in hospitals. don't you think that if we started bombing them wherever they were that maybe their own population would stop supporting them?
6/17/2007 6:12:58 PM
on a side note, the terrorists are guaranteed a victory basically no matter what....just like the hezzbollah war with Israel a little while ago. all they have to do is outlast. they kill some soldiers here and there, blow up a few bombs and essentially they can get there asses kicked militarily...but if a few terrorists are left standing at the end of it, then they have won in their minds and in the minds of the middle east as a whole. "look at us brave fighters, we stood up to the infidel", and so on and so forth. how much harm they do to the other side is irrelevant so long as someone is left standing at the end to claim they are still alive.the middle east is basically a case study on failed governments and self pity, but they are good at one thing....wars of nationalism
6/17/2007 6:27:35 PM
John Edwards on Iraq at the Council on Foreign RelationsThe first 2 minutes are just on congressional bills that have already come to pass, but if you watch the last 1 min & 39 secs of the video you'll see some discussion of plans. Here are some of the highlights:“We need to get out of Iraq on our time table, not when we are forced to by our enemies or by events.””As a recent council report put it, the US has already achieved what it’s likely to achieve in Iraq. And staying in Iraq can only drive up the price of those gains””In Congress and the Whitehouse the focus has been on when to get out, how to get out, and how quickly to get out. Too little consideration has been given to what happens after we get out.””I believe that once we’re out of Iraq the US must retain sufficient forces in the region to prevent a genocide, to detour a regional spillover of the civil war, and to prevent an Al Qaeda safe haven.””We will most likely need to retain quick reaction troops in Kuwait and in the Persian Gulf. We’ll also need some presence in Baghdad, inside the green zone, to protect the American Embassy and other personal.””Finally we’ll need a diplomatic offensive to engage the rest of the world in Iraq’s future: including Middle Eastern nations & our allies in Europe.” On this point he’s said that may mean not being inflexibly closed to engaging with regional neighbors like Iran & Syria pointing out that they both have interests in a stable Iraq.He’s also talked about combining a mission focused on training Iraqi’s with showing we’re actually going to leave by starting to withdrawal some troops.
6/17/2007 6:44:18 PM
6/17/2007 7:44:08 PM
^
6/17/2007 9:13:06 PM
i think what we're doing is working. we're making progress. bush never said it'd be a short war. we should just trust his judgement.
6/17/2007 11:10:36 PM
lol
6/18/2007 12:14:32 AM
^^ clearly. and i really hope that Bush II will stay in the office until this war is wrapped up. certainly there is some kind of executive war powers type act he can invoke. this war is far too important to allow it to be bungled by the diversionary influence of a presidential election. anyhow, i mean look at the clowns that are lining up already -- on either side. do any of them have the slightest clue how to successfully prosecute a war of this complexity and historical import?? i think not.GWB '08
6/18/2007 12:43:25 AM
More MOABs.
6/18/2007 12:51:21 AM
MOABs? why bother with self-restraint? its only those who break the rules who win. besides, didnt ya hear, the Geneva Conventions have been rendered irrelevant. a quaint, antiquated notion.lets just get this thing done. Iran too.i mean, what the hell. this is a preventative war. anyhow, it'll make the bleeding heart liberals happy, so we dont have to drag all these Ragheads and Mahdij's back to be tortured for years on end. Free up our Supreme Court so we can get about the real business of American values: outlawing abortions and fag-marriages.[Edited on June 18, 2007 at 1:49 AM. Reason : ]
6/18/2007 1:41:02 AM
6/18/2007 2:08:39 AM
simple: one big ass bomb.
6/19/2007 6:48:41 PM
This is what's been in the news since yesterday:US commander in Iraq says troops may be needed for decadehttp://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=&q=iraq+US+decade
6/19/2007 9:12:14 PM
more like "US Troops Needed until Democrat gets into office"
6/19/2007 9:18:51 PM
6/19/2007 10:01:53 PM
6/20/2007 10:26:12 AM
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=201671138&s=143441&i=16803852That's the most recent podcast of This American Life (episode 335 titled "Big Wide World").It is the story of an Iraqi that use to work for the Iraq Information Ministry under Saddam, and his personal perspective of the invasion during and a bit after.It helps to provide a little more insight on to what could be done by the US, and what WAS done that might not have been the right thing to do.I would encourage you all to listen to it, because the tone of the guy's voice says a lot...But one thing that I thought was notable is that factions started forming immediately after the invasion. If the US could have capitalized on the relief that Saddam was gone very early on, they could have rode this momentum of stability. But, the damage inflicted by the initial attack (the "shock and awe") seems to have been very souring to the Iraqis in their view of the Americans. Basically, the people of Baghdad in the course of a day went from having electricity and water, to not having electricity and water, and this made them very irritable.
6/21/2007 6:34:44 AM
6/21/2007 1:33:22 PM
lose the war? to who? we defeated the Iraqi army, and Saddam is dead... that sounds like a 'win' in most books....or is it a 'war' to defend against internal fighting and suicide bombers?some of you have a very warped perspective of 'war'
6/21/2007 1:38:10 PM