There may be little progress on political goals crafted in America, to meet American concerns, by politicians who have a cushion of 200 years of democracy. Washington might as well be on the moon. Iraqis don’t respond well to rules imposed from outside their acknowledged authorities, though I have many times seen Iraqi Police and Army of all ranks responding very well to American Marines and soldiers who they have come to respect, and in many cases actually admire and try to emulate. Our military has increasing moral authority in Iraq, but the same cannot be said for our government at home. In fact, it’s in moral deficit because many Iraqis are increasingly frightened we will abandon them to genocide. The Iraqis I speak with couldn’t care less what is said from Washington but large numbers of them pay close attention to what some Marine Gunny says, or what American battalion commanders all over Iraq say. Some of our commanders could probably run for local offices in Iraq, and win. To say there has been no political progress in Iraq in 2007 is patently absurd, completely wrong and dangerously dismissive of the significant changes and improvements happening all across Iraq. Whether or not Americans are seeing it on the nightly news or reading it in their local papers, Iraqis are actively writing their children’s history.
Thanks for linking to Michael Yon. The guy is awesome, one of the only journalists who has gotten embedded and stayed there, giving us the good, the bad and the ugly. Remarkable, remarkable reporting; in a sane world where Pulitzers weren’t reserved for the beautiful people, he’d win one, even though he’s “just” a blogger.
[i] Inappropriate comment deleted by elf. [/i]
Elf: Apologies for my inappropriate comment. I took this piece as a political entry, and therefore commented (over-sarcastically?) on the politics of a possible abandonment of Iraq by the US.
In faith, Dave
Viva Texas