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Friday, July 13, 2007
Charles Krauthammer :: Townhall.com Columnist
Growing With Time
by Charles Krauthammer
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


"The key to turning (Anbar) around was the shift in allegiance by tribal sheiks. But the sheiks turned only after a prolonged offensive by American and Iraqi forces, starting in November, that put al-Qaeda groups on the run." -- The New York Times, July 8

WASHINGTON -- Finally, after four terribly long years, we know what works. Or what can work. A year ago, a confidential Marine intelligence report declared Anbar province (which comprises about a third of Iraq's territory) lost to al-Qaeda. Now, in what the Times' John Burns calls an "astonishing success," the tribal sheiks have joined our side and committed large numbers of fighters that, in concert with American and Iraqi forces, have largely driven out al-Qaeda and turned its former stronghold of Ramadi into one of most secure cities in Iraq.

It began with a U.S.-led offensive that killed or wounded more than 200 enemy fighters and captured 600. Most important was the follow-up. Not a retreat back to American bases, but the setting up of small posts within the population that, together with the Iraqi national and tribal forces, have brought relative stability to Anbar.

The same has started happening in many of the Sunni areas around Baghdad, including Diyala province -- just a year ago considered as lost as Anbar -- where, for example, the Sunni insurgent 1920 Revolution Brigades have turned against al-Qaeda and joined the fight on the side of U.S. and Iraqi government forces.

We don't yet know if this strategy will work in mixed Sunni-Shiite neighborhoods. Nor can we be certain that this cooperation between essentially Sunni tribal forces and an essentially Shiite central government can endure. But what cannot be said -- although it is now heard daily in Washington -- is that the surge, which is shorthand for Gen. David Petraeus' new counterinsurgency strategy, has failed. The tragedy is that, just as a working strategy has been found, some Republicans in the Senate have lost heart and want to pull the plug.

It is understandable that Sens. Lugar, Voinovich, Domenici, Snowe and Warner may no longer trust President Bush's judgment when he tells them to wait until Petraeus reports in September. What is not understandable is the vote of no confidence they are passing on Petraeus. These are the same senators who sent him back to Iraq by an 81-0 vote to institute his new counterinsurgency strategy.

A month ago, Petraeus was asked whether we could still win in Iraq. The general, who had recently attended two memorial services for soldiers lost under his command, replied that if he thought he could not succeed he would not be risking the life of a single soldier.

Just this week, Petraeus said that the one thing he needs more than anything else is time. To cut off Petraeus' plan just as it is beginning -- the last surge troops arrived only last month -- on the assumption that we cannot succeed is to declare Petraeus either deluded or dishonorable. Deluded in that, as the best-positioned American in Baghdad, he still believes we can succeed. Or dishonorable in pretending to believe in victory and sending soldiers to die in what he really knows is an already failed strategy. Continued...

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About The Author

Charles Krauthammer is a 1987 Pulitzer Prize winner, 1984 National Magazine Award winner, and a columnist for The Washington Post since 1985.

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Storo
I couldn't have said it any better. Excellent post.

SteveL, on another thread, clearly laid out the democrats demands, give us Bush or we will deliberately lose the war. What a swell group of patriots, huh? Actually, they want both but would probably settle for Bush's head in a guillotine. They stand to lose political power for a long time when Iraq becomes relatively stable.

I believe the dems agenda is more insidious than simply getting more political power. They are controlled by a radical left base that truly wants America to lose everything and give radical Islam a chance to grow more powerful. It truly saddens one to realize the ignorant masses might be swayed to surrender on the brink of victory due to the koolaid drinking behavior of the leftists in this country who hate GWB so much they would sacrifice the country to feel like they got him.

It's politics, stupid
Liberals and Democrats have never gotten over the impeachment of Bill Clinton and the 2000 election. From the start, right or wrong, good or bad, the liberal media, Michael Moore, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, Obama, Kerry, and all the rest have said "Bush is a liar" over and over and over in the hope that this lie will gain traction and people will believe it. That's why you see stories about how he supposedly "lied" in misleading the country into Iraq, despite intelligence from at least 4 allies that Al Qaeda was using the country as a training and recruiting base. Perhaps the intelligence was wrong. That does not mean Bush lied. As Joseph Goebbels once said, "if you tell a lie, tell a big one, and repeat it over and over, and soon the people will believe it." That's the Democrat strategy. Say Bush is a liar and soon it will be believed. Unfortunately the American people have seen through that strategy and returned Bush to office in 2004. The only ones believing the Democrat lies are the naive teen-to-twenty-somethings who can't name the Vice President or their state's senators on Hannity's Man On The Street segment.
This same strategy is being applied to Iraq. Say it's lost, say we're beaten, say we can never succeed, say there's no reason to be there. Say it again and again. and soon the people will start to believe it. At least 5 Republican Senators will.
No, the war is not popular. I don't like it any more than the Democrat critics do. The difference is that while I see the war as a painful but necessary step in battling terrorism and Islamic radicalism, Democrats see it as an issue to be used for political gain and advantage. If we pull out and extremist radical terrorists take over the country, the American lives that have been lost will have been in vain. I don't accept that as an outcome and believe we can and must continue our fight to stabilize Iraq and help the Iraqi people.
When you talk to the troops returning from Iraq, as I frequently have the opportunity to do in my travels around the country, you hear their optimism and their belief that 1) it is meaningful, 2) progress is being made and 3) the Iraqi people with whom they have contact are grateful that we are there. It's a tribute to the wall of denial put up by the media and the Democrats that we never hear about this.
I have become disappointed in Bush, especially his support for immigration amnesty on behalf of big business. But I will not abandon him when it comes to Iraq. And while he may be wrong on things like immigration, he does not have to prove to me that he has been unfairly maligned by Democrats wistfully pining for 8 years of a Gore presidency that never was.
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