11/12/2004|||110027202753184299||||||THE VIEW FROM CENTRAL COMMAND
George Will, visiting the HQ in Tampa, gets an overview from Gen John Abizaid and his staff (registration required):
"Officers here believe that the problem of foreign fighters in Iraq has been vastly exaggerated -- that only a few hundred of 10,000 people detained in Iraq are foreigners. In Fallujah, a Darwinian dynamic may be at work -- survival of the most dangerous. That is, many insurgents fled before the Marines came, while the stupid ones stayed. The core of the insurgency -- former regime elements -- may include a few who want to return to the good old days of the 7th century but many more who want to return to the good old days of power in Baghdad and shopping at Harrods in London.
"Abizaid believes that radical Islam today is roughly akin to Bolshevism in 1890 and fascism in 1920 -- there is time to stop its rise, but it must be stopped. Military success is certain. The enemy dare not mass. In Vietnam, U.S. battalions suffered defeats. In Iraq, there has been no platoon-size defeat, and regular U.S. infantry units perform tasks that would have called for Delta Force skills a decade ago.
"...Success in Iraq, people here believe, is contingent on three ifs: if Iraqi military and security forces can stay intact during contacts with the insurgents; if insurgents are killed in sufficient numbers to convince the Sunni political class that it must invest its hope in politics; and if neighboring states, especially Syria, will cooperate in slowing the flow of money and other aid to the insurgency. If so, then the United States can -- this is the preferred verb -- "stand up" an Iraqi state and recede from a dominant role."
|||Clive|||http://clivedavis.blogspot.com/2004/11/view-from-central-command-george-will.html|||11/12/2004 03:00:00 pm||||||
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