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Iraqi Democracy 3, Terrorists 0
RealClearPolitics ^ | December 18, 2005 | Sen. Jon Kyl

Posted on 12/18/2005 6:28:00 AM PST by billorites

After months of criticism of President Bush’s policy, gloomy press coverage that seemed to focus almost entirely on car bombs, and near panic on the part of some Congressional Democrats, we now have a useful barometer to assess the real state of affairs in Iraq - Thursday’s historic and enormously successful parliamentary elections.

The third national plebiscite vote in just two years since Iraq’s liberation from Saddam Hussein was largely free of violence and saw a turnout rate higher than most western nations’. Millions of Iraqis who proudly dipped their fingers in purple ink, enjoying the democracy that our troops and their own have sacrificed so much to build, provided what the Wall Street Journal rightly described as “the most eloquent rebuttal to American defeatists.”

Voter turnout was high across nearly all regions of the country, including such former terrorist strongholds as Fallujah and Tal Afar. Sunni Arabs, who largely sat out January’s interim election and October’s constitutional referendum, have clearly changed their minds, participating in the democratic process in such huge numbers that some polling sites ran out of ballots.

No one ethnic group or party is likely to emerge with a clear majority in parliament; so forming a new government will require flexibility and compromise. And time. This process will be as difficult in Iraq as it is in every other parliamentary democracy, but that’s a sign of civic health.

As are numerous improvements in the lives of ordinary Iraqis that never seem to command the media attention that relatively isolated terrorist attacks do. Most Americans are not aware, for example, that:

· According to a Brookings Institution report, “for all the insurgents' attempts to sabotage the Iraqi economy,” per capita income has doubled since 2003 and is now 30% higher than it was before the war.

· The Iraqi economy is projected to grow 16.8% in 2006; there are five times as many cars on the streets than in Saddam Hussein's day, five times more telephone subscribers, and 32 times as many Internet users.

· While one independent media outlet existed in Iraq before 2003, there are now 44 commercial television stations, 72 radio stations, and more than 100 newspapers.

· “To all of this,” writes Norman Podhoretz of Commentary, “we can add the 3,404 public schools, 304 water and sewage projects, 257 fire and police stations, and 149 public-health facilities that had been built as of September 2005, with another 921 such projects currently under construction.”

· On the military front, a November report by the Committee on the Present Danger (which I am privileged to co-chair in an honorary capacity with Sen. Joseph Lieberman), cites a compelling example of what is being accomplished by American troops. In the recent Operation Steel Curtain on the Syrian border, our troops detained more than 1,000 suspected insurgents. One hundred weapons caches were found and cleared.

The report also notes the steady strengthening of the Iraqi armed forces, and the increasing degree of responsibility they are assuming in the fight against the insurgency: Since July, Iraq's armed forces have added 22 new battalions, and 5,500 police-service personnel have been trained and equipped (as have some 2,000 special-police commanders). Coalition senior officers report that 80 Iraqi battalions now are able to fight alongside our troops and 36 are "generally able to conduct independent operations." More than 20 of the coalition's forward-operating bases have been turned over to the Iraqi army.

One would hope that these improvements and last week’s election would finally silence the claims, from Hollywood to Howard Dean, that the war in Iraq is "unwinnable." The sheer size of last week's turnout makes clear that the insurgency lacks a broad base of support inside Iraq. If the new government serves its people well and protects the rights of Iraq’s minority Sunnis, terrorists will have fewer and fewer places to hide.

Sen. Kyl serves on the Senate Finance and Judiciary committees and chairs the Senate Republican Policy Committee. Visit his website at www.kyl.senate.gov.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: iraq; iraqielection; kyl; progress

1 posted on 12/18/2005 6:28:01 AM PST by billorites
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To: billorites

Excellent piece!

Americans could only wish for a SEVENTY PERCENT VOTER TURNOUT!

Semper Fi,
Kelly


2 posted on 12/18/2005 6:32:30 AM PST by kellynla (U.S.M.C. 1st Battalion,5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Div. Viet Nam 69&70 Semper Fi)
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To: kellynla

Not hardly. You want a Democrat House?


3 posted on 12/18/2005 6:34:53 AM PST by Appalled but Not Surprised
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To: billorites
Howard Dean was right if you ignore the high voter turn out, the doubling of the Iraqi per capita income since 2003, the 16.8% projected growth rate for 2006, the dramatic increase in media outlets, the 3,404 public schools, 304 water and sewage projects, 257 fire and police stations, and 149 public-health facilities that had been built as of September 2005, with another 921 such projects currently under construction, the growing Iraqi army and the decreasing number of coalition bases.
4 posted on 12/18/2005 6:37:19 AM PST by Man50D
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To: kellynla
This is a direct repudiation of all the things John Murtha said about the situation on the ground in Iraq.
5 posted on 12/18/2005 6:38:07 AM PST by Recon Dad (Force Recon Dad (and proud of it))
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To: Appalled but Not Surprised

we already have a "Democrat House" LOL; what I'm hoping for is a "Conservative Republican House"


6 posted on 12/18/2005 6:44:20 AM PST by kellynla (U.S.M.C. 1st Battalion,5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Div. Viet Nam 69&70 Semper Fi)
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To: billorites

Iraqi Democracy 3, Terrorists and Senate Democrats 0


7 posted on 12/18/2005 6:50:55 AM PST by JohnLongIsland
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To: billorites

I wanted to draw people's attention to an article in the Wall Street Journal on Thursday, December 15, 2005. The article is "Mightier Than The Pen" by Matt Pottinger and it is on in the editorial page.

Matt Pottinger was a writer for the Wall Street Journal. At the age of 31, he observed a video of an American in Iraq being beheaded by al Zarqawi. He felt terror, then anger. A short while later, he was having a conversation with a Marine Corps colonel, who just come back from Iraq. "At one point,[Pottinger writes] I said half jokingly that, being 31 years old, it was a shame I was too old to serve. He sat back for second and said, 'I think I've still gotcha.'" And he did.

Now Pottinger is a commissioned 2nd lieutenant in the Marines.

This article is the story of how this happened. I recommend it to any conservative.

(Sorry, not on the web, as far as I know.)


8 posted on 12/18/2005 7:14:26 AM PST by strategofr
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