Critics of the U.S. troop "surge" in Iraq, called for by President George
Bush in January, early on cited American losses and then announced the
plan's failure. Supporters, on the other hand, have seen progress from new
tactics (which, many argue, should have been adopted far earlier).
Such wide disagreement over a military campaign in progress is not that
unusual. Sixty years after World War II, historians, even with the benefits
of hindsight, still argue over the cost-benefit ratios and strategic results
of diverse battles from Operation Market Garden to Okinawa.
The U.S. military reports that the surge in Iraq has helped reduce violence
and defeat terrorists. But its officers also warn of manpower shortages, as
well as commitments in Europe, Japan, the Balkans, Korea and elsewhere in
the Middle East. We can't maintain the surge at present manpower levels in
Iraq indefinitely.
So how do we know whether the surge is working - especially whether its
apparent present tactical success will translate into long-term strategic
advantage?
In September, Gen. David Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq, will issue a
status report on the war to Congress. Experts then will study
quality-of-life issues in Iraq, such as the status of water, power and
sewage services. American casualty figures will be weighed against a sense
of improving or worsening security. And we will again examine the Iraqi
government's ability to provide effective anti-terrorist forces and relieve
some of our responsibilities.
But in the meantime, the American public can look to more subtle indicators
to get some sense of Gen. Petraeus' current progress or failure.
Do Democratic opposition leaders keep blaming each other for voting for the
Iraq war? Or are they now talking about expanding military operations to
other countries? Sen. Hillary Clinton once was damned for voting to
authorize the war in Iraq. But her even more liberal rival Sen. Barrack
Obama, D-Ill., now expresses his own willingness to invade nuclear Islamic
Pakistan.
Do anti-war politicians frequently proclaim our defeat in Iraq - or instead
worry that the war might be won? In the spring, Sen. Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., announced Iraq was lost, the surge a failure and Gen. Petraeus
not "in touch." We haven't seen Sen. Reid much lately.
But we have heard from the House's majority whip, Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C.
He's worried that Gen. Petraeus' good news about the surge might be "a real
problem for us" - "us" being anti-war Democrats. And at a congressional
briefing, when Gen. Jack Keane reviewed the positive signs from the surge,
Rep. Nancy Boyda, D-Kan., walked out on the testimony. She complained that
there was "only so much that you could take . . . after so much of the
frustration of having to listen to what we listened to."
What do we hear from those who cited our success in the initial war but then
wrote of the chaos of the occupation? Democratic analysts Michael O'Hanlon
and Kenneth Pollack recently returned from Iraq to co-author a New York
Times op-ed entitled "A War We Just Might Win." Respected veteran New York
Times reporter John Burns believes that the surge has markedly improved
security in Iraq.
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