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Monday, July 30, 2007
The New York Times' John Burns: "The Possibility Of As Many As A Million Iraqis Dying."
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 7:18 PM
The transcript of my interview with the New York Times' John Burns is here. (I taped it Friday.) The audio for the two-hour broadcast will be here later. Some key excerpts:

HH: One of the arguments for those favoring a timeline for withdrawal that’s written in stone is that it will oblige the Iraqi political class to get serious about such things as the oil revenue division. Do you believe that’s an accurate argument?

JB: Well, you would think it would be so, wouldn’t you, that the threat of withdrawal of American troops, and the risk of a slide into catastrophic levels of violence, much higher than we’ve already seen, would impel the Iraqi leadership to move forward. But there’s a conundrum here. There’s a paradox. That’s to say the more that the Democrats in the Congress lead the push for an early withdrawal, the more Iraqi political leaders, particularly the Shiite political leaders, but the Sunnis as well, and the Kurds, are inclined to think that this is going to be settled, eventually, in an outright civil war, in consequence of which they are very, very unlikely or reluctant, at present, to make major concessions. They’re much more inclined to kind of hunker down. So in effect, the threats from Washington about a withdrawal, which we might have hoped would have brought about greater political cooperation in face of the threat that would ensue from that to the entire political establishment here, has had, as best we can gauge it, much more the opposite effect, of an effect that persuading people well, if the Americans are going, there’s absolutely no…and we’re going to have to settle this by a civil war, why should we make concessions on that matter right now? For example, to give you only one isolated exception, why should the Shiite leadership, in their view, make major concessions about widening the entry point for former Baathists into the government, into the senior levels of the military leadership, that’s to say bringing in high ranking Sunnis into the government and the army and the police, who themselves, the Sunnis, are in the main former stalwarts of Saddam’s regime. Why would the Shiites do that if they believe that in the end, they’re going to have to fight a civil war? This is not to reprove people in the Congress who think that the United States has spent enough blood and treasure here. It’s just a reality that that’s the way this debate seems to be being read by many Iraqi politicians.

HH: Would a, John Burns, a contrary approach yield the also counterintuitive result that if Congress and the United States said we’re there for two or three more years at this level, would that assist the political settlement, in your view, coming about?

JB: Unfortunately, I think the answer to that is probably not, and that’s something that General Casey and General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker now, General Petraeus’ partner, if you will, are very wary of. They understand that there has to be something of a fire lit under the feet of the Iraqi leaders. It’s a paradox, it’s a conundrum, which is almost impossible to resolve. Now I think the last thing that you need is an Iraqi leadership which is already inclined to passivity on the matters, the questions that seem to matter most in terms of a national reconciliation here, the last thing they need is to be told, in effect, the deadline has been moved back three years. I would guess the way, if you will, to vector all of this would be to find some sort of solution, indeed it was the benchmark solution, which would say to them if you come together and you work on these benchmarks, then you will continue to have our support. But it seems to me that the mood in Congress has moved beyond that. The mood in Congress, as I read it from here, at least those who are leading the push for the withdrawal, are not much interested anymore in incremental progress by the Iraqi government. They’ve come to the conclusion that this war is lost, that no foreseeable movement by the Iraqi leaders will be enough to justify the continued investment of lives and dollars here by the United States, and that it’s time to pull out. And of course, you can make a strong argument to that effect.

And:



HH: Now you’ve reported some very tough places, Sarajevo, Afghanistan under the Taliban, and after the liberation from the Taliban, and you’ve won Pulitzers for that. When you say cataclysmic civil war, what do you mean in terms of what you’ve seen before? What kind of violence do you imagine would break out after precipitous withdrawal?

JB: Well, let’s look at what’s happened already as a benchmark. Nobody really knows how many people have died here, but I would guess that in terms of the civilian population, it’s probably not less than 100-150,000, and it could be higher than that. I don’t think it’s as high as the 700,000 that some estimates have suggested, but I think it’s, and I know for a fact, that the sort of figures that were being discussed amongst senior American officials here, as a potential, should there be an early withdrawal and a progress to an all-out civil war, they’re talking about the possibility of as many as a million Iraqis dying. Now of course, that is suppositional. It’s entirely hypothetical. How could we possibly know? But I think you couldn’t rule out that possibility. And the question then arises, catastrophic as the effect on Iraq and the region would be, you know, what would be the effect on American credibility in the world, American power in the world, and America’s sense of itself? These are extremely difficult issues to resolve, and I can’t say, sitting here in Baghdad, that I have any particular wisdom about what the right course would be. And fortunately, as a reporter, I’m not paid money to offer that kind of wisdom, only to observe what I see. And there are days when I thank God that I’m not sitting in the United States Senate or the United States House of Representatives, with the responsibility of putting the ballot in the box on this.


And:

HH: No, I was asking when al Qaeda was in Afghanistan under the Taliban regime, they obviously developed potential and capabilities and operational abilities that resulted in 9/11. If they anchored themselves in a lawless Iraq, would their lethality towards the United States be even greater or lesser than it was when they were in Taliban Afghanistan?

JB: I would say it would probably be greater, and for these reasons. Let’s remember that the Afghanistan, that was a sanctuary for al Qaeda and bin Laden, is a very, very underdeveloped, I dare say primitive country. Iraq is not. Iraq is a country that had and potentially still has a major industrial base, it has among Middle Eastern countries one of the most highly educated corps of scientists and engineers, people who were on their way, certainly in the early 1990’s, to developing nuclear weapons, even if that program, as we now know, fell by the wayside after the first Gulf War. Many of these people have left, but would some of them come back? You would then have to add to that the fact that this is an oil country, which even in the situation of a civil war, is exporting billions of dollars of oil to the world, and could potentially export much more. So I would say add to that the question of geography. We’re a thousand miles closer here in Baghdad to Western Europe and the United States than Mr. bin Laden and his followers were when they were in Afghanistan. So I think yes, it could be a serious problem. Whether that problem can be overcome in any foreseeable or acceptable period of time here, I don’t know. If we knew the answer to that, we’d be well on our way to deciding whether or not it’s worth staying here. But I think to deny that there is such a problem, or even simply to blame it on the Bush administration…[call dropped and resumed ona different question]

The combination of Burns' assessments, and those of Michael O'Hanlon, Ken Pollack and many other fair observers of the war completely undercuts the demands by the anti-war hysterics for a timetable for withdrawal. The prospect of a genocide with a million Iraqis dead and a secure base for an even more lethal al Qaeda should be enough to end the debate until such time as General Petraeus reports, and if he sees progress, until such time as he concludes there is no way to avoid the genocide. Abandoning Iraq to the butchers of al Qaeda or the fanatics of Iran and the radical Shia militias would be unconscionable, especially given the solid indications of momentum on behalf of the Coaltion and Iraqi government forces..



View in ascending order View in descending order
John Konop writes: Wednesday, August, 01, 2007 8:31 AM
Death up for Civilians in Iraq

I am thankful U.S. troops death are down, but if civilian death is up in Iraq how can that be a good sign?

USATODAY(AP) — American military deaths for July rose to 76 on Wednesday with the report of three U.S. soldiers killed by a powerful roadside bomb in Baghad, but the toll was still the lowest in eight months as the U.S. said it was gaining control of former militant strongholds.

By contrast, July was the second-deadliest month for Iraqis so far this year, according to an Associated Press tally.

U.S. military officials, while saying they were heartened by the downturn in American deaths, cautioned it was too early to predict a sustained trend.

“We had said over the summer it’s going to get harder before it gets easier,” said Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a military spokesman in Baghdad. “We’re hoping that we’re in the easier part, but we still obviously have a long way to go.”

Iraqi deaths rose, with at least 2,024 civilians, government officials and security forces killed in July, about 23% more than the 1,640 who died violently in June, according to AP figures compiled from police reports nationwide. That made July the second-deadliest month for Iraqis so far this year; at least 2,155 Iraqis were killed in May.

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/death-up-for-civilians-in-iraq

manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 9:18 PM
Anne
I haven't seen your posts before, so I will assume you are taking advantage of your work-release.

You say a mark of intelligence is facts -- well, what FACTS support the 1,000,000 casualty estimate? As for Malkin -- right, it must be because she doesn't support my perspective. That's it.

And Neo -- who said Burns is the anti-Christ? The question is -- where does he get that number from? Has he got the studies to support it? It is so conveniently round -- why not 743,000? As for the "traitors" -- the point is that they are NOT traitors -- they have been for the war from the start, so saying this is going well is, well, par for the course. You make it sound as though there has been a feeding frenzy, when most of the complaints have been measured --
Anne writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 9:00 PM
manfred writes: "...I suspect quoting

Michelle Malkin is slightly less authoritative than the Lancet/JHU."

Really? And would that be because Michelle Malkin doesn't ascribe to YOUR lib-idiot point of view????

Right! That's exactly what I thought!

See, here's the thing! A mark of intelligence is the ability to look at FACTS...cold, hard FACTS... and re-evaluate one's opinions and views based on those FACTS.

The opposite of that, of course, is someone who has a fixed false belief that is resistant to reason or confrontation with actual fact, which is clearly a lib-idiot perspective.

Is there ANY question why the dumbo party has garnered an 86% Disapproval Rating... and in record time?

Ummm... probabaly not!







NeoConScum writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 8:32 PM
Good Grief...There You Go Relentlessly..
..proving that your brainpan defies gravity. Lordy...(Pardon usage,secular dog.)John Burns is now the Antichrist(now appearing on the pages of Pravda) Pollack & O'Hanlon are traitor-useless turncoats due to some reasond critical thought...
Also,published on the pages of Pravda...Iraq
would be a Dark Age Butcher Yard under the tender mercies of the Jihadists and YOUR country would,if ever,a century to recover from retreating from a hugely important strategic area.

And you guys would rejoice in the lesson. Pathetic. Read Victor Hanson more...Andrew Sullivan less. Call us next year.
manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 6:47 PM
Noah and inkling
First, I suspect quoting Michelle Malkin is slightly less authoritative than the Lancet/JHU. Now, let's assumethy overestimated (and they gave a range) -- suppose it is 200,000 -- that is still, in short order, close to all the people that Hussein killed. So "mission accomplished." I'm sure the killing will be over very soon -- so it will probably be about a tie.

Inkling, two things. First, history matters -- you cannot just say, well, we blew it going in but... it is something we need to come to terms with -- second, Burns admits it is supposition that there will be 1,000,000 deaths if we leave -- and it is strange that the Lancet -- using accepted methods -- comes up with a number that is unacceptable to Michell Malkin, but this guy just pulls 1,000,000 out of the air, and suddenly anyone who wants to leave is responsible for 1,000,000 deaths in advance. Well, I'll make everyone on this blog a deal. You are responsible for all the civilian deaths from the start of the war till the day we leave; I'll be responsible for the ones that follow our exit. I suspect I will have less to answer for. If we stay long enough, the medium-intensity ethnic cleansing that is going on right now will leave no one left to kill.
Anne writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 4:20 PM
It's a good thing that HH has

interviewed John Burns... At least Burns is ON RECORD.

Did I happen to miss when Matthews and/or Olbermoron are going to interview Burns????

Well, maybe if Burns' assessment was the opposite both Matthews and Olbermoron would interview him in a heartbeat.


MattlasShrugged writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 3:49 PM
Great Interview
Burns pretty much confirms that while there has been some improvement in the security situation, the political situation is nowhere close to being resolved with an actual solution likely years away IF it's even possible without worse bloodshed. The coalition forces are the only thing standing between a possible bloodshed and an inevitable one. Despite the laudible progress the military has made, nothing in the Burns interview justifies the optimism coming from Hugh or the scorn he heaps on the pro-timetable crowd. For example:

"HH: Would a, John Burns, a contrary approach yield the also counterintuitive result that if Congress and the United States said we’re there for two or three more years at this level, would that assist the political settlement, in your view, coming about?


JB: Unfortunately, I think the answer to that is probably not, and that’s something that General Casey and General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker now, General Petraeus’ partner, if you will, are very wary of. They understand that there has to be something of a fire lit under the feet of the Iraqi leaders. It’s a paradox, it’s a conundrum, which is almost impossible to resolve. Now I think the last thing that you need is an Iraqi leadership which is already inclined to passivity on the matters, the questions that seem to matter most in terms of a national reconciliation here, the last thing they need is to be told, in effect, the deadline has been moved back three years."

And given the realty of the situation as reported by Mr. Burns, it surely doesn't follow that Iraq is going to be a winning issue for the GOP in 2008.
inkling writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:50 PM
Ellen...
As I said to Manfred, let's assume that Bush's war decision was a horrid, irredeemable act. Bush is gone in 18 months anyway, so he no longer matters.

Now what? Genocide or democracy? Are liberals going to let this "cowboy religious nut" be more humane that they are?
Ellen Waldstein writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:39 PM
Inkling....
How much has blood has Bush shead for his "political capital" sacrifice?

I have a feeling 3,653 American families would trade their child's life for W's "political capital" any day.
Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:25 PM
Lancet: not replicable, ergo not science
From:

http://michellemalkin.com/2007/07/25/document-drop-a-new-critique-of-the-2004-lancet-iraq-death-toll-study/


:Shannon Love at the Chicago Boyz blog called foul on the Lancet 2004 study early on and, with vindication, reacts to David Kane’s new analysis of the 2004 Lancet Iraq death toll study: “Kane shows that if the Falluja cluster is included in the statistical calculations, the confidence interval dips below zero, which is a big no-no. Since the study’s raw data remain a closely guarded secret, Kane cannot be absolutely certain that the inclusion of the Falluja cluster renders the study mathematically invalid…but that’s the way to bet. In science, replication is the iron test. I find it revealing that no other source or study has come close to replicating the original study. All my original points still stand. Ah, vindication is sweet.”

READ, Manfred: the study is attacked by statisticians, using robust statistical methods. Your BBC reports "officials" defendingthe study without offering supporting without statistical evidence. Why don't you read your own citation? You'll see disagreement and doubts about the study is mentioned right there in it.

READ , Manfred: the study's raw data is still a closely guarded secret. If so, then just how the EFF does the BBC KNOW the statistics and results are valid?

Again, I ask: for there have been 650K deaths from war violence alone,. the streets should have been filled with millions of wounded, as Iraq hosptials could not have taken them in. Were were they?

Every statistician who has looked at the Lancet results and compared them with every other study notes that the Lancet results are 5 to 10 times
higher than the rest.

It is therefore incumbent on the Lancet people to produce their data and methodology, defend it, and let others try to replicate their results using their methofds.

They won't.

Instead they commit a mortal sin in the scientific world: they say, "trust us, it's true."

Sorry, but your gullibility, fueled by your agenda, is at work here. Either that, or you know squat about how science works.
inkling writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:22 PM
Manfred...
You are talking history, while I am talking about the future. Let's accept your premise that Bush entering Iraq was a dastardly deed and the Left's numerous warnings have been utterly vindicated. Awesome job, kudos and a round of applause to you and yours.

So now what? The choice is:
1. Probable genocide and a new base for Al Qaeda.
2. Possible stabilization with a fledgling democracy for the Iraqi people and no shelter for Al Qaeda.

Which option do you choose?

It's fine to argue about how we got here, but it is criminal to ignore where we are heading.
John Konop writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:21 PM
‘Untouchable’ corruption in Iraq
‘Untouchable’ corruption in Iraq ministries

Does anyone think Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will be able to pull Iraq together?

MSN-Desperate shortages of drugs and medical supplies in Baghdad’s overcrowded hospitals are confronting the victims of violence. But the shortages are not because of a lack of money.

Medicines and supplies have been siphoned off and sold elsewhere because of corruption in the Iraqi government’s Ministry of Health, according to a draft U.S. government report obtained by NBC News.

The report, written by U.S. advisers to Iraq’s anti-corruption agency, analyzes corruption in 12 ministries and finds devastating and grim problems: “Corruption protected by senior members of the Iraqi government,” the report said, “remains untouchable.”

One potential problem, according to the report, is in the office of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/%e2%80%98untouchable%e2%80%99-corruption-in-iraq-ministries

manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:44 PM
inkling
But you ascribe motives that haven't been proven to the President -- why are we doing all this? To say we are staying to prevent genocide is to join the showq in progress. HE started all this, and his original justifications were not humanistic. Even his nonsense about "freedom being on the march" was theological (maybe one might argue it was vestigial Hegelianism left over from the neo-cons such as Fukayama, but even that is a form of theology). The Lord has given us the gift of freedom, and we will now give it to the Iraqis.
Part of humanism is reason -- and few things in this war have been rational. If you were so worried about genocide and body-counts, maybe you should have listened to those of us who said this was where this would lead -- before the war. Otherwise, it is the Hiroshima argument: we must kill hundreds of thousands to stop the possiblity of millions of deaths, and if you are against dropping the bomb(s), you must be for those deaths. Nonsense.
inkling writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:27 PM
Manfred...
The point of my post wasn't theological. It merely showed that a conservative president is proving far more humanistic than the liberal leadership of this nation.

The Dems are the ones willing to accept genocide as long as it makes a lame-duck Bush drop in the polls a few more points.

Apparently when the post-Holocaust world said "never again," they should have added, "...unless it will help us get elected."

Jon, http://exurbanleague.com
manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 11:52 AM
Inkling
Clearly Bush doesn't believe Muslims (or Jews for that matter) can go to heaven.

http://www.jewishworldreview.com/1298/bush1.asp

I don't think that prevents him from fighting a war over either. There are a number of important American political figures who don't believe Jews can go to heaven who are especially vigorous in their defense of Israel -- in no small part because that is where End Times will center. I cannot pretend to know what motivates the President -- but he does have to live with his own words.
DirtCrashr writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 11:42 AM
So Congressional grandstanding...
...and Senatorial bullying - doesn't work and has the opposite effect, with much in the way of unintended consequences?
inkling writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 11:29 AM
Ellen Waldstein...
You allege that the "born-again/Fundamentalist Christian" Bush thinks all Muslims are hell-bound and thus valueless. Meanwhile, this "heartless" Republican president is sacrificing every ounce of political capital to protect Muslims while nearly all Democratic leaders are consigning them to wholesale slaughter.

I think this shows that most "crazy evangelicals" view each Iraqi as being made in the image of God, thus giving them incalcuable value. What ideology do you hold that would endorse the genocide of these people? And please remind me why your bloody philosophy is superior to mine.

Jon, http://exurbanleague.com
manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 10:32 AM
jtb
Is that satire? Are you refering to the general response to TNR and Beauchamp? After attacking the message (he can't really be a soldier), you all jumped on the messenger (well, fine, he's a soldier, but he is a bad person, a bad soldier, etc etc etc). Or were you all just acting like liberals?

As for the Lancet report -- you all don't know sheep-dip from shinola. It WAS peer-reviewed, and its methodology was acknowledged to be proper by the the British government.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/6495753.stm

But I suppose Bush probably has a deep understanding of this sort of survey, so when he says it's not true, he is probably right. He usually has been on the war. Such as when he was asked how many civilians had died, and he didn't know cause we don't keep track.
richard mcenroe writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 10:20 AM
jtb-in-Texas
Classic Sol Alinsky tactics, right out of his Rules for Radicals...
jtb-in-texas writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 10:00 AM
Liberals are so freakin' predictable...
When the facts prove them wrong, and the world catches them in bald-faced lies, they immediately change the subject and attack the messenger...

Ellen Waldstein writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 9:20 AM
So?
Why should George W. Bush care?

As a Born Again/Fundamentalist Christian, he believes that Muslims are going to Hell, anyway. Excuse me.... he would say they are "not saved."

So what possible value can their lives have to him?
Joe writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 8:59 AM
Burns says it is close to lost
That means this is really the last chance. If the surge is just postponing the inevitable, why bother? Why risk one American life or one additional $1 for that? It is worth doing only if it has a chance of succeeding.

I am for trying now and giving Gen. Petraeus a chance to make it work, but if things do not start improving then we have to go to Plan B.
jtb-in-texas writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 8:47 AM
Great Interview!! It clearly shows
why stupid political hacks in DC should not try to threaten Asians whose philosophies and culture they do not understand.

The thing most Dhimmicrat politicos miss is that the leadership in a military dictatorship like Saddam's is one guy. Effective lieutenants are "purged", like Stalin did with his generals (and most of his officers) before WW2.

We're having to rebuild Iraq from the ground up. We spent a lot more time in Germany and Japan rebuilding them after WW2. You'd think Democrats would want to rush in and get all Marshall Plan over Afghanistan and Iraq... It's the FDR thing to do...

Like trying to stack the Supreme Court...
storms writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 8:26 AM
new book by tony dungy
Just got coach tony dungys book "Quiet strength" it is a fantastic read. he shares some of the principles that have guided him through his amazing life. I found this publication to be a real page turner and I just had it hard to put down. he is a real role model.
coach tony dungy has some great winning on the field or off the field.
great gift for the family and your friends
sincerly
tom chastain
John Konop writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 7:26 AM
‘Untouchable’ corruption in Iraq
‘Untouchable’ corruption in Iraq ministries

Does anyone think Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will be able to pull Iraq together?

MSN-Desperate shortages of drugs and medical supplies in Baghdad’s overcrowded hospitals are confronting the victims of violence. But the shortages are not because of a lack of money.

Medicines and supplies have been siphoned off and sold elsewhere because of corruption in the Iraqi government’s Ministry of Health, according to a draft U.S. government report obtained by NBC News.

The report, written by U.S. advisers to Iraq’s anti-corruption agency, analyzes corruption in 12 ministries and finds devastating and grim problems: “Corruption protected by senior members of the Iraqi government,” the report said, “remains untouchable.”

One potential problem, according to the report, is in the office of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/%e2%80%98untouchable%e2%80%99-corruption-in-iraq-ministries


Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 2:49 AM
Good night thought
Back in the day, in the countries forced into the USSR, in the midst of their privations and petty daily oppressions, grown-ups and adults alike would ask plaintively "Why can't we be a normal country?"

Ya think, after the triumph of a multi-ethnic Iraqi soccer team in a league they were considered sure losers, millions of Iraqis aren't having that same thought?

YA THINK????
Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 2:43 AM
Thanks, Josephus
Funny how the moonbats argue there will be no genocide, and then argue it won't be a million, and then let Obama say "What - EV!!!" Not our problem!!
Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 2:40 AM
ExDemo and oil
exDemo wrote: "In the interim reality intervened. Oil and lots of it was discovered in Sunni Iraq. Now all have or will have Oil. Its much easier to agree to share whan all have something to contribute."

Citations, please!

this would be terrible news for the loons!
Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 2:37 AM
For Mechanical Eye
You expect WAR without DEATH?

You are a MOONBAT, sirrah!

Josephus Flavius writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:31 AM
Correction
I meant "New York TIMES editorial board"
Josephus Flavius writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:30 AM
Wow
Noah Zark, you have been on fire tonight. Excellent!

For the record. The Lancet Study, which was not even peer-reviewed - or, apparently, fact-checked - to begin with, has now been conclusively debunked by a recent paper by David Kane, Institute Fellow at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University.

Don't believe genocide is a possibility? Well, don't take John Burns' word for it, just as the fellows at the New York editorial board, or Barack Obama.

I know it hurts liberals to be stabbed in the back by an MSM reporter (from the vaunted New York Times, no less!), but hey, the truth will out...
exDemo writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:12 AM
An Irrelevant Judgement
There was an cagey political attempt to set up impossible to meet requirements to be evaluated in a few months to "prove" the Iraqi's were not being democratic. Thus justifying abandoning them.

The single mosot significant item was Oil Revenue sharing.

This "impossibilist requirement" was set because the Shia had Oil; the Kurds had Oil; but the Snnis had NO Oil.

In the interim reality intervened. Oil and lots of it was discovered in Sunni Iraq. Now all have or will have Oil. Its much easier to agree to share whan all have something to contribute. The Sunni deposits s look ot be very large too,larger tha the Kurds and mayve equal to the Shia's OIL lands . But everyone would like to ensure that they could "share" some of it.
they need money and peace ot exploit it; th Sahi and Kurds have peace and access ot money. the also have the oil concessions ot give ot the Oil companies. All profit.

As a cosnquence the Iraqi's WILL HAVE some political reconciliation, some more Peace, and a useless OIl Sharing Law.

Democrat Copperheads screw up once again. Lincoln did it to the with his General Grant. Bush is doing it to them with his General Petraeus.

The Mechanical Eye writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 1:10 AM
Hugh Admits 100,000 Dead Iraqis
Before he fabulated this million-Iraqi figure, Burns mentioned that 100,000 or more Iraqis have already died since Mission Accomplished began.

Hugh didn't contest this figure, since these dead men, women and children can safely be blamed on The Decider's ingenious war planning.

But why mourn them, or show a single point of reflection over the entirely preventable horrors of the past four years?

Rather, our noble host can only share his grave horror for the countless speculative lives the Democrats will supposedly kill by leaving a country we can barely police.

Dhimmicrats! Demoncrats! LIBS. What slipshod concern for Iraq's internal order!

It's as if Don Rumsfeld were in charge of leaving!

DU
Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:40 AM
Where will U.S Congress be in August?
mcfritz writes: "Summer, Summer; Vacation, Vacation While the United States loses one hundered or more of the honorable and brave in Iraq, the "government" of Iraq has gone on vacation until September 4. "


And the Democrat-led "House" and "Senate" of the United States "Congress" are doing....what?....during the month of August, while our brave troops do battle with the enemy?

aren't they going into summer recess very soon?

Don't Pelosi and Reid have the ability to keep their branches in session?

Just askin', is all....

(because I know mcfritz will offer no meaningful response)
richard mcenroe writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:38 AM
those do-nothing Ay-rabs....
McFritz -- That would be the Iraqi Congress that has passed more bills than the Democratic Congress, would it?
richard mcenroe writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:36 AM
6000,000 dead was a number...
...submitted to the Lancet by a Democratic Candidate for Congress immediately prior to the '06 election. It was never peer-reviewed or verified.

Noah Zark writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:30 AM
Lancet as truth -- hah!
Brian J writes: "And agreed with Jsmith- you wouldn't believe the Lancet when they showed their work on how the shrub had 655,000 Iraqis killed, but you're now pulling bigger numbers out of thin air to justify hanging around?"

"Lancet "showed their work"?? SNORK! They showed their RESULTS. Lancet to this day will not reveal their raw stats or details of their methodology.

No true scientists would keep their data secret, yet insist it is true. But agenda-driven leftists would.

Jesus, Brian, you are an encyclopedia of brazen ignorance. Ditto B-Rob.

Google a little and you can find quite damning indictments of Lancet's use of statistics re Iraq.. One was at Michelle's blog the other day --- you have to be a statistician to follow much of the argument, but it's there for all to see.

But it might be tough for people who know nothing of math or reasoning.

Brian: DON'T YOU FACT-CHECK ANYTHING BEFORE POSTING?

And, I should point out, Burns offers a PREDICTION. He says "the possibility of as many as". Lancet argued FACT based on "secret" statistical data.

Every other statistical measure (including data collected by the Iraqi government), puts the death figure at roughly 1/10th the 600+ thousand.

for 600 dead to be true, there would have to be millions of wounded. They would be lying on gurneys in the streets. They are not.

As to the argument that if we prevent a civil war, and save "POSSIBLY" as many as a million lives, it's still not worth it: well, then, moonbats: tell us why democrats who say it isn't worth it in Iraq (like B. Hussein Obama) are countered by other democrats who say it IS worth it to lose US troops in a civil war in Darfur.

Why did Dems vote for going into Bosnia and opposing Serbia? Just what IS yer friggin' standard, Brian/B-Rob?

Listen up, stupes: "dying in vain" happens when WE LOSE. WINNING with casualties is not LOSING. WINNING is not "dying in vain". The 400K+ soldiers who died in WWII did not "die in vain". BECAUSE WE WON. German and Japanese soldiers died in vain.

Soldiers and their kin know the difference, even if historical imbeciles like Brian J and B-Rob don't.

manfred writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:25 AM
By the bye
Given that the Lancet had the deaths at over 600,000 a little while back -- with us THERE -- if we stay ON for a few more years, there could be 1,000,000 dead anyway. Additionally, there could be a few more million emmigrants -- so, even if we stay, they might be looking at 3,4, even 5 million fewer people (and I suspect the birth rates are dropping).

As for the "never again" argument -- I am all for stopping genocides whenever possible. But I take a sort of medical approach -- first do no harm -- and this is a genocide that we UNLEASHED -- clearly the violence of the last few years far exceeds anything Hussein would've done had he remained in power. For all the talk about all the people he killed -- removing military deaths from the Iran/Iraq war (which we supported), it would not reach the numbers that have died in the last few years. In his whole reign.
mcfritz writes: Tuesday, July, 31, 2007 12:07 AM
Summer, Summer; Vacation, Vacation
While the United States loses one hundered or more of the honorable and brave in Iraq, the "government" of Iraq has gone on vacation until September 4.
richard mcenroe writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 10:11 PM
Then let's try to put it ...
...into a reasonable perspective:

How many Palestinians have been killed in their internecine power struggles? Out of what percentage of the population?

How many died in Rwanda during the ethnic cleansing? Out of what percentage of the population?

What are the numbers and percentages for Bosnia/Kosovo, Darfur, the Congo, Eritrea?

How will those percentages be affected in Iraq by the Saudis and Iranians pouring in funds, arms and fighters to their factions?

Brian J writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 10:05 PM
Richard
He meant regular, running water.

And agreed with Jsmith- you wouldn't believe the Lancet when they showed their work on how the shrub had 655,000 Iraqis killed, but you're now pulling bigger numbers out of thin air to justify hanging around?
richard mcenroe writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 9:39 PM
I'll take a key of what yer smokin'...
Yankee -- 8 million Iraqis don't have water? Are you freaking insane?
inkling writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:56 PM
Never again?
"Liberals used to be the ones who argued that sending U.S. troops abroad was a small price to pay to stop genocide; now they argue that genocide is a small price to pay to bring U.S. troops home."
-- Jonah Goldberg, National Review
yankee writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:49 PM
one third
of Iraqis have no access to water, sanitation or food. 4 million are refugees - 2 million have left the country, 2 million remain.

We have royally fu**ed up Iraq. Or should I say the right wing in America has. They simply don't have a clue as how to deal with this enemy. Bush and the other Republicans made it worse by giving the bad guys status by treating them like a bonafide military. They've created more and more terrorists by their CICs incompetent bumbling. Fools and idiots running the GOP these days, no doubt.

And now, we're arming the very people that attacked us on 911, the Saudis. Yeah, we were attacked by the Saudis, and what do the elephant electorate do? They cheer when Bush attacked Iraq, lmao.

We've been down this road before, with the Republican party arming our enemies. We always get payed back in spades for doing this unholy and incredibly naive foreign policy.

Well, there's a special place in hell for people like you folks. Enjoy the fires my friends.

Peace my brothers and sisters
Jsmith writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:39 PM
Mr. Burns on the Simpsons
is more believable than this guy. If the Democrats have blood on their hands for the 1 million proposed casualities, does it mean the GOP have the blood of current Iraqis?

And where is the analytical methodology behind the 1 million number? At least the Lancet study of the $655K death fame had some statistics behind it.
Frank writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:25 PM
manfred v. John Burns
I'll go with Burns every time.
Winston writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:23 PM
great interview
Thanks for the interview, Hugh...
manfred writes: Monday, July, 30, 2007 8:15 PM
1 million?
Out of 26-27 million total? So 1 in 27? And what scientific method came up with this felicitously round number? Cause it sounds a good deal like it came out of someone's backside.

Also, I can get behind not abandoning people to alQaeda -- though that is a small portion of the insurgency by our own government's assessments. I also can get behind not leaving it to Iran. But not leaving it to the Shia militas? Well, that sounds a good deal like saying not leaving it to the majority of the country. Are we, therefore, to back the minority Sunnis -- the same group that backed Saddam before? Are we on the road to putting in another Saddam? Would that be a success? Cause he would've dealt with our 3 big enemies ruthlessly. Sounds like we sort of blew it.
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