5/21/2016 9:06:46 PM
Yah it's totes their fault and has nothing to do with our actions there since WW1.
5/21/2016 11:38:36 PM
Iraq was not a shariah law country either...
5/21/2016 11:49:55 PM
I used to be a big fan of partition, but now I'm not so sure. Yes, three states makes more sense than the one semi-failed state we have now, but any mechanism for getting there make things worse for us.If we support a partition plan, there will inevitably be violent clashes for which we will ultimately be blamed. There's no clear-cut place to draw the line, so you end up with migrations and bloodshed -- remember India and Pakistan, who asked to be partitioned. Turkey would never forgive us for allowing a Kurdish state, which they would probably attack and invade anyway.
5/23/2016 11:18:08 AM
Iraq: A Deadly DeceptionAn inside look at how world leaders and the American public were duped into a war that cost thousands of lives.http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/specialseries/2017/01/iraq-deadly-deception-170108082649899.html45 min video
1/30/2017 2:08:23 AM
3/20/2018 3:41:31 PM
The evening following the attack on the al-Rashid Hotel, a senior U.S. military officer came to visit my Rangers in our humble house in the Green Zone. He asked me how things were going.“Not too bad, sir. The boys are fine. Good spirits. We got a little shaken up this morning by the rocket attack on that hotel. You know, sir, the hotel Paul Wolfowitz was staying at.”The senior officer stared at me. “Good,” he finally said. “That guy needs to experience getting shot at for once in his life.”Neither of us said anything else. We stood on the porch and looked at the lights in the Green Zone.* * *A few days later, I was sitting on the hood of my armored Humvee, smoking another cigarette and trying to figure my life out. Over the spring, while recovering from my knee injury, I had started planning out my post-Army career and had taken the LSAT and applied to a few law schools.I wasn’t enthusiastic about it.“Do I really want to be a lawyer?” I asked Collin.He sighed. “You tell me, man,” he replied. “Do you want to spend all next year studying torts and stuff?”I most certainly didn’t. When we returned from Iraq in January of 2004, I took the GRE and applied to the American University of Beirut to study Arabic and the history and politics of the Middle East. My poor girlfriend—the one I had asked to mail me an entire carton of Gauloises after just three days in Iraq—was whiplashed by my change of plans.I could see, though, that our national misadventures in the Middle East were not ending anytime soon. Getting out of Iraq—and the greater region—was going to be much harder than getting in. And we, including myself, seemed to have sown the seeds for a brutal and persistent insurgency in Iraq itself.Indeed, in the years after I left, the war got worse. Much worse. The removal of Saddam set off a bloody struggle for dominance between Sunni and Shia Arabs in the country, and for the first time in generations, the Shia had the upper hand. American and allied troops, who still thought they were in charge and labored mightily under that illusion, were almost bystanders to the conflict but were very much fair game to combatants of every faction. I had not lost a single Ranger in combat in 2003 and 2004, but by 2006 and 2007, my peers—who were by now company commanders or Special Forces detachment commanders—were contending with deadly “improvised explosive devices” and losing too many men to count.One of those roadside bombs killed my friend Joel Cahill in late 2005. Joel’s widow Mary, an Army nurse, had stayed up with me the entire night following my knee surgery in 2003. When I moved to Washington, DC at the end of 2008, one of the first things I did was to go visit Joel’s grave at Arlington.* * *In the summer of 2015, I returned to Iraq for the first time in over a decade. I was now the deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East, and the Islamic State was knocking on the gates of Baghdad.I had arrived at the Pentagon in May, on the Monday after the Islamic State had captured the Iraqi city of Ramadi. I sat in a briefing with the secretary of defense, listening to our military commanders—many of whom I knew and admired from my brief time in the Army—reel off the names of places in Fallujah, Mosul, and Ramadi that I remembered from too many long nights studying maps under street lights.One lesson we agreed on was that we had erred, between 2003 and 2007, in putting U.S. forces in the lead. We defeated an insurgency, sure, but the Iraqis never owned the resulting victory. So when we designed the campaign plan to defeat the Islamic State, we assumed some risk by supporting the Iraqi forces—a more time-consuming and messier approach, and one that likely caused more Iraqi civilian deaths—in the expectation that the Iraqi victory would be more sustainable. I have no idea if this new hypothesis will prove correct in the long run, but I do take comfort from the fact that it’s less expensive, for Americans anyway: We lost only five U.S. servicemen during my time at the Pentagon, even as Iraqi military and civilian casualties remained appallingly high.The war in Iraq and its many, often conflicting, lessons continue to shape the war’s veterans in different ways. Some of my fellow veterans grew deeply cynical about all military endeavors—which I understand. Others, such as Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas and many senior officials in the Trump administration, including the current secretary of defense, retained a faith in military power but developed intense antipathy toward Iran given its support for militias that killed hundreds of U.S. soldiers—which I also understand.As for me, I developed what will probably be a lifelong suspicion of any moral justifications for initiating a conflict. Both contemporaneously and in retrospect, the best case for invading Iraq in 2003 was the moral case, even though the primary case concerned weapons Saddam turned out not to have. But the war’s supporters made the moral case effectively: How could the United States allow a mad tyrant like Saddam Hussein to remain in power? The man gassed his own people! But those moral arguments blinded our thinking about second- and third-order consequences—in addition to honesty about our own limitations—and helped lead us into arguably the greatest strategic mistake in our nation’s history.4,500 U.S. troops died in Iraq, and countless more returned home with physical and psychological wounds they—and we, as a society—will deal with for the rest of their lives. As a nation, we have sunk over one trillion dollars into Iraq so far— one trillion dollars you see missing every day in unpaved roads, underpaid teachers, and the social services our congressional leadership tells us we don’t have the resources to fund.And are Iraqis even better off? Are they at least an appreciative ally of the United States in the region? Conservative estimates of Iraqis killed in the war tally north of 100,000 dead. The Iraqi people suffered immensely during our invasion and the civil war that followed—a civil war we proved unable to end or even shape. Today, Iraq’s political class understands it needs continued U.S. diplomatic and military support, but Iraq’s people largely hate our country for what we ourselves did and for what we then allowed to happen. I can’t blame them.* * *Each afternoon in Iraq, I would return to my platoon from my planning sessions and brief my squad leaders on the night’s target. As the fall progressed, we went after more and more of the foreign fighters now flooding into the country, and those missions were always hazardous and seemed worthy. Those were bad, dangerous people. But often we were just looking for some hapless regime hanger-on. For two weeks of my life, for example, I searched for Saddam’s favorite mistress, a homely girl with a lazy eye. That meant for two weeks of my life her picture was strapped to my forearm, every night, looking up at me (and also just past me).I didn’t try to hide my cynicism, and my men appreciated that.“What’s on the schedule for tonight, sir?” they would ask.“Boys,” I would reply, “I’m not going to lie: This is some fucking bullshit.”Eight months later, back in Afghanistan, I left my platoon for the last time. They gave me a plaque, which reads, at the bottom: To Captain Andrew ‘Kid Ex’ Exum. This is fucking bullshit.Yes, boys. Yes, it was.[/quote]https://www.theatlantic.com/amp/article/555983
3/20/2018 3:41:54 PM
15 Years After U.S. Invasion, Some Iraqis Are Nostalgic For Saddam Hussein Erahttps://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2018/04/30/605240844/15-years-after-u-s-invasion-some-iraqis-are-nostalgic-for-saddam-hussein-era
5/1/2018 2:08:24 AM
This just in: Some Americans Are Nostalgic For Confederate Era
5/1/2018 9:41:46 AM
our secretary of state and national security adviser still think it was a good idea
5/1/2018 9:52:35 AM
5/1/2018 1:32:19 PM
we're now at the point in the forever war where people are completing their prison sentences and being released https://www.npr.org/2019/05/23/725865999/john-walker-lindh-the-american-taliban-set-to-be-released
5/23/2019 8:44:33 AM
On September 12 of this year, someone who WAS NOT BORN on 9/11 will become eligible to go participate in our little mideast adventure.
5/23/2019 10:59:44 AM
via GIPHY
5/24/2019 2:12:02 AM
Iraqis would like us to please get the fuck out of their countryhttps://twitter.com/MidEastWitness/status/1220638455526502400?s=19
1/24/2020 9:36:35 PM