A VERY revealing editorial from the WSJ.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110007075…. Yet the Iraqis are where we want them to be: divided on critical matters of politics and faith, but still determined to resolve their differences through a binding written compromise. Their discussions are hot and sometimes intractable because all the parties know these debates matter. Federalism and the political role of Islam--perhaps the two most troublesome subjects--are critical issues throughout the Middle East. No one in Washington should want these debates toned down or curtailed.
Many in America may not like the outcome--liberals are already overwhelmingly defining Iraqi democracy's success by whether women's social rights are protected and advanced--but the deliberations foretell what is likely to happen elsewhere in the region as it democratizes. Contrary to so much commentary in the U.S., it is the compromises--the liberal "imperfections"--in Iraq's experiment that may have the most positive repercussions in the Middle East.
"liberals are already overwhelmingly defining Iraqi democracy's success by whether women's social rights are protected and advanced" – the clear implication that conservative’s AREN’T defining the success of Iraqi “democracy” by that.
The whole article is redolent of what the Neocons’ fall-back position is – a Western-friendly Theocracy, or Theocracies.
The Skin