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Bullish on Iraq (There are numerous reasons for optimism)
The American Prowler ^ | 8/15/2005 | TAS Subscriber in Iraq

Posted on 08/14/2005 10:40:34 PM PDT by nickcarraway

IRAQ -- Being in Iraq, I'm frequently asked about my impression of what's happening here. Often, I'm reluctant to say because my opinions seems so at odds with the prevailing wisdom, especially the farther you get from Iraq. Maybe I'm an eccentric since I believe things will work themselves out for the best and for the following reasons.

* The Constitution was on time, despite al Qaeda threats to Sunni imams. The Iraqis again proved the critics wrong. And they will continue to inspire people who believe in democracy and self-rule (not all of whom are neoconservatives), despite what the shrill critics of this rescue operation being performed by the coalition in Iraq might say. The world's perceptions are going to be changed as the Iraqis continue to form a government.

* President Bush is bullheaded and determined to continue fighting al Qaeda and its allies, and he will remain so, especially in Iraq. He won't flinch regardless of the petty partisan advantage sought by his political foes and their allies in the media. Those hoping to undermine the war will have to face the fact that Bush was twice elected, increased the Republican control of the House and Senate twice, and is not backing down no matter how loud the din of demagoguery grows from the likes of Senators Kennedy and Byrd. The Democrats are playing a losing hand again and re-fighting the last election, which they lost but have yet to realize. They'd be wiser to look abroad where Australia's PM John Howard and the UK's PM Tony Blair have both been re-elected despite the same histrionics of opponents in those countries.

* Iraqis too are turning on Wahhabism wherever they've lived under the jihaddis. Like all people they resent religious chauvinism, especially the religious chauvinism of foreigners. The Iraqi Sunnis are not cut from the same cloth as the Saudi fanatics who flock to Iraq by way of the Damascus airport. The Washington Post's 14 August 05 report that "Iraqi Sunnis Battle to Defend Shiites" illustrates the inevitable conflict that will also undo Zarqawi and his al Qaeda co-conspirators. These tensions, a fatal flaw for the spread of Wahhabism, exist elsewhere but are rarely mentioned. Even in Chechnya, local Moslems are fed up with Wahhabi Puritanical popinjays. In Africa, too, scholars report local religious leaders wary of Wahhabi gunmen, who are young, rude, and arrogant punks denouncing local Moslems for the way they've practiced Islam for hundreds of years.

* Proof of the resentment against these foreign jihaddis is seen whenever Coalition forces take back territory once under the control of the jihaddi terrorists. Ordinary indigenous Iraqis show coalition forces where the bomb-making factories are. This is a consistent fact on the ground. Iraqis frequently identify terrorists and bomb-making locations. Tips and intelligence are flowing toward the Coalition. The balance has shifted.

* The U.S. is working feverishly on material solutions to save U.S. and coalition lives. One example is the up-armoring of vehicles from the HMMWV to nearly every other vehicle. Efforts at material solutions are made across the board; they are as highly imaginative as robots that search for IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices) and as low tech as K-9s. Many are classified and yet to be fielded. This part of the war is constantly improving and comprehensively addressing all threats posed by the terrorists from IEDs to indirect fire. The media can spin the improvements in body armor as a failure, but soldiers never even used body armor before the U.S. toppled the Taliban.

The public should be happy to know the U.S. military is not content if something even a little bit better can be found to protect its service members. The U.S. and its allies will win the technological race. To believe the terrorists will outpace these efforts is to believe they can embrace science overnight in a way that it has no aptitude for; its only hope is continued assistance from Syria and Iran. But as for the terrorists, what have they have ever invented other than killing without pity and then wallowing in the gore on the Internet? And for those who think the coalition is not winning against these terrorists, why is it that Coalition forces are incapable only of picking up the enemy when they do not know their location? When was the last time a terrorist group entered a Coalition facility to snatch one of its leaders and then held them in a known location? It is because of the Coalition's strong position that the terrorists have shifted from attacking Americans to killing random Iraqi civilians.

The terrorists have only the roadside bomb and the un-aimed mortar to use today. An enemy whose greatest strength is its ability to hide is not going to win. This enemy may delay success and drive up the costs. He may create a protracted terrorists environment like that in Colombia, Spain, Algeria, Israel, and for a longtime Ireland. But as in those countries, democracy muddles through and will rule at the end of the day.

* All decent people in the world, and possibly even most liberals, will wake up to the similarities between the terrorists in Iraq and the terrorists in Britain, Egypt, Spain, Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Bali, Thailand, and the Philippines, to name a few locations. Only the hard left will hold out hope that the U.S. will get its comeuppance in Iraq in some Pol Pot Cambodia type denouement. But for most people, the more the terrorists strike the rest of the world the more they remind civilized people that we're all in this struggle together. Ignoring the Iraqis' suffering at the hands of these fanatical criminals will become less politically correct.

* The Internet makes it far more difficult for the mainstream media to hide unpleasant facts about America's enemies and those who wish to see the U.S. military and the Coalition fail for their own political agenda. As Dan Rather found out, keeping the truth from the public is beyond the broken monopoly of the mainstream media now. Internet users know that President Bush has already met with the publicity-seeking and prominently grieving Cindy Sheehan. The days when CBS's Walter Cronkite could undermine a war are behind us. Now, people can search out the whole story no matter how much New York Times spikes stories about Air America or puts a "they're just Arab nationalist spin" on the terrorism in Iraq. Granted the TV News will continue to fight for the return of its lost power, but its days of shaping public opinion are gone. It can still do great harm, but it cannot hide the truth about the terrorists in Iraq or Michael Moore's soul mate Cindy Sheehan.

* Even al Jazeera's propping up of bin Laden and crew will grow old as more and more people come to understand the symbiotic relationship that exists between terrorists and media that prominently display them. Al Jazeera will have to decide whether it wants to be a credible news organization or whether to prefers to pander to the bloodlust of ghoulish viewers. It may wish to fill that niche market that enjoys repeated showings of beheadings and other backward and benighted violence. But nothing debases the Arabs more in the world's eyes than the impression al Jazeera gives that Arabs have an insatiable lust for cruelty. Al Jazeera, with a potential to enrich the lives of Arab viewers, can either become a enlightening and cosmopolitan influence or further its present role as the inspirers of violence.

* The unthinking use of the terms "insurgents" and "insurgency," implying as they do some sort of legitimate struggle, is now under fire. It has started to dawn even on slow-witted media types that the "insurgents" are primarily the old Baathists terrorists unwilling to give way to the long-suffering majority and the rule of law; that they are also criminals employed by the Baathists; and finally that they are the self-proclaimed al Qaeda affiliates. Those who continue to call these murderers "insurgents" will have no more credibility than if they called the KKK an insurgent organization.

* The Iraqi people have not buckled under the threat of terror. They voted when threatened with death. They continue to fill the ranks of the police and the army as quickly as the Coalition can train them despite suffering the most casualties of any member nation in the coalition. They engage the enemy with growing confidence and bravery all the time. The long-suffering Iraqis know that failure is not an option. A proud and nationalistic people, they nonetheless know that Saddam had brought them to a point where they need assistance from the U.S. The quickest way to end the much-needed U.S. assistance is to defeat the terrorists. Iraqis are keen to do it and to wish the U.S. farewell. It is time the media focused on their courage and their pluck instead of the car bombers and faceless murderers that get so much airtime and ink. Meanwhile, the Iraqis continue to turn on and turn in the terrorists and their mercenaries.

Iraqis know too well what failure would mean: mutually assured destruction. That alone still keeps me optimistic.

The writer, who must remain anonymous, is an Iraq-based subscriber to The American Spectator.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: iraq

1 posted on 08/14/2005 10:40:34 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Lady In Blue; CheneyChick

ping


2 posted on 08/14/2005 10:40:56 PM PDT by nickcarraway (I'm Only Alive, Because a Judge Hasn't Ruled I Should Die...)
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To: nickcarraway
The Democrats are playing a losing hand again and re-fighting the last election, which they lost but have yet to realize.

Bears repeating.

3 posted on 08/14/2005 10:43:36 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Peace Begins in the Womb)
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To: nickcarraway

Well, winning hearts and minds is the goal. This anecdote seems promising.

Have a Coke and a smile.


4 posted on 08/14/2005 10:44:24 PM PDT by Kryptonite
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To: nickcarraway

Sound analysis.


5 posted on 08/14/2005 10:47:14 PM PDT by elhombrelibre (Typing from an undisclosed location.)
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To: nickcarraway

The bonehead leftists fools will be as wrong about this as they were wrong about Reagan and the Soviet Union. They are on the wrong side of history...again.


6 posted on 08/14/2005 10:49:51 PM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: nickcarraway; jan in Colorado; Dark Skies; AmericanArchConservative; Former Dodger; ...

thanks nick, truth and common sense always wins!


7 posted on 08/14/2005 10:53:42 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (Understand islam understand evil - read THE LIFE OF MUHAMMAD free pdf see link My Page)
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To: nickcarraway
I needed that! Bump!

...even most liberals, will wake up to the similarities between the terrorists in Iraq and the terrorists in Britain, Egypt, Spain, Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Bali, Thailand, and the Philippines, to name a few locations.

Certainly not most.

8 posted on 08/14/2005 10:57:05 PM PDT by luvbach1 (From the belly of the beast in San Diego)
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To: Jeff Chandler
Bears repeating.

When was the last time a sports fan heard that?

9 posted on 08/14/2005 10:58:45 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Peace Begins in the Womb)
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To: nickcarraway

bttt


10 posted on 08/14/2005 11:00:48 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nickcarraway
Thanks,nick.Upbeat and refreshing

The writer makes the most important point of all.Ultimately the Iraqi's will decide their fate,and they of all people know what the stakes are.

11 posted on 08/14/2005 11:03:01 PM PDT by smoothsailing (Qui Nhon Turtle Co.)
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To: nickcarraway
The Washington Post's 14 August 05 report that "Iraqi Sunnis Battle to Defend Shiites" illustrates the inevitable conflict that will also undo Zarqawi and his al Qaeda co-conspirators.

Here is that story if you missed it, Worth a read:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/13/AR2005081301209.html
12 posted on 08/14/2005 11:05:49 PM PDT by konaice
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To: nickcarraway
All decent people in the world, and possibly even most liberals,

I love that line, expecially when you find out it was written by The writer, who must remain anonymous, is an Iraq-based subscriber to The American Spectator.

I'm betting it was one of our guys/gals/

13 posted on 08/14/2005 11:10:24 PM PDT by konaice
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To: Names Ash Housewares; DuckFan4ever

Do the Democrats ever get tired of being wrong?


14 posted on 08/14/2005 11:36:01 PM PDT by DuckFan4ever (Proud Bushiite.)
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To: konaice

"All decent people in the world, and possibly even most liberals,

I love that line, expecially when you find out it was written by The writer, who must remain anonymous, is an Iraq-based subscriber to The American Spectator.

I'm betting it was one of our guys/gals/"

I'm guessing it is one of our service people, who must remain anonymous because he or she, as a member of the Armed Forces, is not supposed to be partisan. This person clearly loathes liberals, and is probably an ardent supporter of GWB.


15 posted on 08/14/2005 11:57:55 PM PDT by Brandi in AZ
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To: DuckFan4ever
No ....
the reason is ? they have deluded themselves into thinking that they are always right.
16 posted on 08/15/2005 1:01:43 AM PDT by Prophet in the wilderness (PSALM 53 : 1 The ( FOOL ) hath said in his heart , There is no GOD .)
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To: nickcarraway
Bump! Here are some other words about the fight in Iraq from a deployed National Guard Soldier.... in his own words:

"My name is [edited out]. I’m from Eunice, Louisiana and been a member of the Louisiana National Guard going on five years. I am a sergeant in Alpha Company, 1088th Engineer Battalion and work as a team leader. For nearly a year, the 1088th has conducted combat missions in Iraq supporting the 256th BCT in operations such as Base Camp Security, Route Clearance, Providing security for EOD personnel and many other tasks throughout the deployment.

At times the question, what is the real reason we’re doing here without reason. Although many soldiers and their families understand what we’re doing here is justifiable, we sometimes forget or lose focus on purpose due to seemingly endless operations and the separation between families and their soldiers. Therefore, it may be considered essential from time to time to remind ourselves how important our presence is in Iraq.

Since the invasion of Iraq and the breaking up of the former Saddam Hussein regime, the country of Iraq has been without a government and reasonable leaders that could look after the good of the people. As a result, terrorist have run freely through Iraq and placed fear within the native people who seek a better nation for themselves and generations to come. For the first time in nearly half a century, the Iraqi people are capable of deciding who they want to govern them and are free to make their own decisions without having to pay the ultimate price, death.

With the US and coalition forces occupying the major cities of Iraq, newly elected government officials are developing and writing a constitution that is soon to completed and will be a doctrine of how the new Iraq will be governed. The US has trained thousands of Iraqi civilians who have taken oath to assist coalition forces in fighting terrorism. Trained Iraqi National Guard, Iraqi Army and Iraqi Police Forces have strengthened and are slowly taken over areas of operation once occupied by US forces. With Joint effort the US, Allies, and Iraqi forces, Operation Iraqi Freedom is living up to its name.

Unlimited sacrifice of soldiers and their families supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom has made a difference for the lives of many innocent people in Iraq. Like other major conflicts that the US haled throughout history, there have been doubts about whether American people should participate. As a soldier in Iraq, I’ve had no option but to see a country of people who are no less than any others, but are so much more unfortunate than most just because they were born. Everyone participating in Iraqi Freedom has their own perspectives as to the reason we’re here. This is just one soldiers look at Operation Iraqi Freedom."

Name withheld.

17 posted on 08/15/2005 2:04:50 AM PDT by W04Man (Bush2004 Grassroots Campaign We Did It! Now on to 2008: http://Allen4President.com)
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To: nickcarraway

Bumped and bookmarked!


18 posted on 08/15/2005 5:55:39 AM PDT by alwaysconservative (Err America: It's for, ah, no, wait, FROM the children.)
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