Originally posted by Ned
Perhaps this requires a different thread, but how does our pulling out of Iraq help the WOT? One of the central "lessons learned" in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 is that al Qa'ida was able to set up bases in civil war-torn Afghanistan because we abandoned that country to civil war after we had supported the various rebel factions against the Russians.
Do the Dems think anything fundamentally different will happen this time in the case of Iraq? And if they do, what is the basis of their thinking?
Perhaps this requires a different thread, but how does our pulling out of Iraq help the WOT? One of the central "lessons learned" in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 is that al Qa'ida was able to set up bases in civil war-torn Afghanistan because we abandoned that country to civil war after we had supported the various rebel factions against the Russians.
Do the Dems think anything fundamentally different will happen this time in the case of Iraq? And if they do, what is the basis of their thinking?
Iraq will be settled out one way or another, since all of its neighbors are interested in the outcome. The only question is how long and how much bloodshed. The rest of the Arab world isn't interested in a Shiite proxy for Iran.
The US let its military get too small and ****ed up the invasion by failing to adequately plan for occupation beyond having favored contractors get quick opportunities to make a buck. Go back to late 2002/early 2003 predictions about how the course of events would go (not vague crap about "it'll be a long road" but all that "beacon of democracy" nonsense), and see how far off track things have been.
The solution isn't to moronically and stubbornly keep troops in a non-sustainable mission for an indefinite period of time. The whole bit about "the enemy outwaiting us" was true from the outset - the arab insurgents aren't going anywhere, and if we stayed 200 years, they'd be fighting us in 200 years.
The only way to deal with insurgency is to turn it into a local on local fight.
In over 4 years, 3,200+ dead, 20,000+ wounded, and hundreds of billions in cost, there is no clear indication we are any better off than before we started. The Iranians are more uppity, our forces are stretched thin, our efforts in Afghanistan have been compromised, OBL and AAZ are still unaccounted for.
Iraq has gone from a tinpot dictatorship with no present or imminent ability to harm us to a dysfunctional cesspool. What else has changed?
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