http://www.conjur.com/blog/2005/09/27/how-to-fix-iraq-is-it-even-possible/As for what I would do in Iraq, cutting and running is a BS term. We are currently in a no-win situation. We don't have enough combat troops in Iraq to properly secure the cities, much less the borders. Our own military commanders have said their missions are futile as the insurgents vacate the area and then come right back. Our presence in Iraq is one hellaciously costly game of Whack-a-Mole. And, there are a helluva lot more of them than there are of us.
Sending over more American troops or other "coalition" troops isn't an answer either. We'd have to send over at least triple what's there now and engage in very heavy-handed tactics that will result in massive casualties on each side. We'd have to be Katrina to Iraq. Not only will it be expensive in lives, but in dollars, as well. Dollars we no longer have to spend.
"Staying the course" isn't accomplishing us anything right now. The insurgents and the foreign fighters move about at will, jumping from city to city. Various cities within Iraq have also regressed to Taliban-like rule with very little freedom for the citizens of those cities (at least those that aren't killed for looking at someone wrong or not wearing a burqa or seen leaving a liquor store or....). We don't have enough troops in Iraq to maintain security and properly train the Iraqi security forces.
One thing not talked about much is the infiltration of the Iraqi government and the security forces by insurgents or people supportive of them. The CPA's disbanding of the entire Iraqi Army has come back to bite the provisional gov't in the ass...hard. And, treating the Sunnis and all Ba'athists as the enemy has been another mistake. These people held power for decades and were not going to run away and hide and take the new government lying down.
A second thing that doesn't get mentioned much is the billions of dollars that just up and disappeared. You can bank on a lot of that money going into the hands of the insurgency and elsewhere in addition to corrupt politicians and businessmen. The insurgency isn't hurting for cash.
Neither are they hurting for explosives and weaponry as the ammo dumps that went unguarded, like al Qaaqa, at the beginning of the invasion were looted of their wares and are now being used to kill our men and women in addition to innocent Iraqi civilians.
So, "staying the course" will not accomplish anything but increasing the body count of "coalition" troops as well as push us further into deficit spending.
No, the only option is a full withdrawal from Iraq. And I mean leaving behind the plans for permanent military bases, too. No Western military presence in Iraq. BUT, before we do that, it would be helpful if we could get *some* assurances from other Arab nations to help Iraq secure itself and to remove incentives for terrorists to flourish. It's time the Middle East began taking care of itself. They can't live in their own little world. They are part of global trade and need to step up their standing to be worthwhile global citizens. It's something this administration should have been pressing for from the outset instead of stupidly going to war based on trumped up and falsified intelligence.
Will there be a continued danger of terrorists flourishing for a while? Sure. But staying isn't going to change that either. Bush screwed the pooch...and he screwed it hard. It's time to set things on the best long-term approach and our military presence in the Mideast is not part of that solution.