IRAQ - WHAT NEXT?
Now Newt Gingrich, speaking here in New Hampshire, is calling the Iraq war a failure.
The Wall St. Journal rails against the defeatism that seems rampant now in Washington, and urges the President to take whatever actions are necessary to win in Iraq.
A key White House aid writes a memo, leaked to the New York Times, that expresses doubts about the ability of Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki to deal with the deteriorating situation in that country.
If it is a failure, then speaking to Iran and Syria, who want us to fail, probably will not get us anywhere, according to Max Boot.
Dick Morris and Eileen McGann think the Iraq Study Group final report will sell out our Israeli friends. An aide to the Baker panel thinks that the group will call for a regional conference, including Israel, that will try to wring concessions out of the Israelis.
As the Shiites and Sunnis arm themselves for the coming civil war in Iraq (if NBC thinks they are seeing a civil war now, what will they call it when the fighting REALLY gets started), Arnaud de Borchgrave thinks the way out of Iraq may be through Iran. The price will be tough to take.
Here is the must-read piece of the morning. A Saudi named Nawaf Obaid, who the Washington Post takes pains to indicate is not speaking officially for the Saudi government, says that if America withdraws from Iraq then the Saudi government must intervene in Iraq to protect the Sunnis from the Iranian-backed Shiites. If anyone thinks that this guy is just spouting off his opinion and it does not reflect the views of the Saudi government, then I have a bridge to sell them.
All of this paints a pretty bleak picture. The American people no longer support the war in Iraq, as expressed in numerous polls and, most importantly, in the last election. They want to win, or get out. The Bush Administration has been unwilling to do those things that would be necessary to win (substantially increase the size of the military, make war against those who are supporting the insurgents and militias in Iraq, etc.). Since the President has consistently refused to widen the war (just like Truman in Korea and Johnson in Vietnam) then, just as in those past conflicts, our only options are stalemate or retreat. We were able to choose stalemate in Korea only because we had invested enormous resources and firepower that enabled us to hold off the Chinese from kicking us off the Korean peninsula. We had a much larger military then, and a draft. We chose retreat in Vietnam. It appears certain that we will choose retreat in Iraq. While President Bush may not choose it, he will only be President for two more years. His successor will almost certainly withdraw our troops (unless America elects John McCain).
This will be an even worse defeat than Vietnam, as the Middle East is of far more strategic and economic value than Southeast Asia. Additionally, at least some of our enemies in Iraq will wish to take the fight to us here at home, even if we retreat from Iraq. That was, of course, not the case in Vietnam. All of this does nothing to change my long-held view that all of this is merely prologue to what will be the next big war.