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Friday, July 04, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Improvement in Iraq Makes Barack Go Back
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON - Violence has drastically declined in Iraq, the chief Sunni Muslim political bloc is ready to rejoin the Shiite-led government, and Obama campaign advisers are talking about a more gradual troop pullout plan.

These are among the remarkable developments occurring in Iraq since President Bush implemented the surge strategy -- a bold gambit that has proven all of the defeatists wrong, strengthened Iraq's fledgling democracy and given Iraqi citizens new hope for a better life.

Abandoning a nearly year-long boycott, Sunni leaders will rejoin Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's cabinet if their six nominees are approved by the parliament as early as this week, a move that can open the way to further reconciliation in the war-torn country. The government has met many Sunni demands for reform, including an amnesty program that released thousands of Sunni detainees this year. Its leaders were also encouraged by Maliki's tougher offensive against violent Shiite militias, particularly Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army.

Meanwhile, a report from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad last week said Iraq has met 15 of the 18 original benchmarks set by Congress to gauge its progress on political, economic and national security reforms. Still, much work remains to be done in three areas: a workable system to govern the oil industry that allows all Iraqis to share in its revenues, the disarmament of militant militia and insurgent groups, and strengthening the country's police forces.

But perhaps the most stunning political development in the aftermath of the surge's success is a grudging movement within the Obama campaign to recognize that the situation in Iraq has improved. The candidate has given signs that he's ready to scale back his defeatist-driven plans for a complete military pullout should he win the presidency in November.

In recent months, some of Obama's top national security advisers have been circulating strategy papers recommending that a significant "residual" U.S. military force be kept in Iraq to insure its stability as Iraqi government leaders work toward national reconciliation. The leader of this movement is Georgetown University defense analyst

Colin Kahl, coordinator of the Obama campaign's working group on Iraq policy.

Discarding the freshman senator's early position for a complete military pullout regardless of the situation on the ground, Kahl is pushing a more strategic, centrist approach that he calls "conditional engagement." Writing in the July/August issue of Foreign Affairs, he says this: "Rather than unilaterally and unconditionally withdrawing from Iraq and hoping the international community will fill the void and push the Iraqis toward accommodation -- a very unlikely scenario -- the United States must embrace a policy of 'conditional engagement.'

"This approach would couple a phased redeployment of combat forces with a commitment to providing residual support for the Iraqi government if and only if it moves toward genuine reconciliation," Kahl writes. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Subject: Apollo
Prior to the invasion Iraq was supposedly this wonderfully secular society that should be used as a model for the rest of the region. Now they are only interested in blowing each other up?

The beautiful thing about democracy is allowing disaggrement without the bombs.

The Iraqi's turned against the outside influences precisely because they promoted violence as the only answer.

3wire/Allen
Allen- well said. I'm with you on your post. These armchair hinsighters are something else. And they act like it's a dance routine of some kind instead of a WAR. That it should go smoothly and according to plan is not how wars work.


3wire- You point out a critical quote (he's not so sure of his judgement). It's showing. Some of his earlier self confidence and assurance is waning, it seems to me. I think his campaign is lost already, actually. He finished the primaries weakly. He's not comfortable or ready in any way to answer real questions. He's dissembling. hard to imagine what he'd do it the press acted like press and really "pressed" him.

It was oh-so much easier for him when he was looking down his nose at his female opponent, and cheered on by adoring fans. We'll see less and less confidence I reckon.
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