Posted on 05/10/2006 7:23:22 PM PDT by a_Turk
Why do they only cite American leftists in the article?
I don't know. Maybe their tv only gets one channel.. Maybe the screw on their dial is loose.
Given your user name and the fact that you posted a "Kurdish" editorial I would venture a guess that you may have a small ax to grind.
My ninth president was a Kurd (God rest his soul) and I am part Kurd. We are thoroughly mixed. Any wide-spread civil unrest between Kurds and non-Kurds in Turkey would be a bloodbath and the end of the Republic. Thus the cheerleaders with their anti-Turkish rhetoric.
I have an axe to grind with liars first and fools second (not directed to you). International affairs are no place for romanticism. You need to see the downside.
THE best way to preserve and encourage peace in the region is to dismantle the parastate Muslim Turkey.
That may not be the best approach but Turkey had better keep its damned hands off Northern Iraq.
Legitimize the militias and you have Iraq decay into another Somalia with warlords like Al Sadr in charge.
Horrible idea. Not even worth discussion or further exploration. It's hypothetical nonsense that has a political agenda behind it.
The last thing you need is 31 different armed militias out there all with their own agenda and ultimate aim to gobble up as much of Iraq as possible. You legitimize whackos like Sadr (A 30 year old punk living off of his dads reputation as an Imam) and you create a monster you cant control and has international acknowledgement/support.
This is another 20/20 hindsight view that is appealing superficially but not even remotely viable if your goal is to create a stable and democratic republic of Iraq.
Frankly, I'm sick to death of them. The Bush administration is doing the best it can to bring these different factions together.
Continuing to vomit up coulda-shoulda scenarios is a waste of time.
The author of this piece can piss up a rope.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmad_Faruqui
Ahmad Faruqui is a defense analyst and energy economist based in the San Francisco Bay Area who serves as director of research at the American Institute of International Studies. He is a regular contributor to Daily Times (Lahore, Pakistan, www.dailytimes.com.pk), and writes frequently for the Global Beat Syndicate (New York University). His most recent book is called "Rethinking the National Security of Pakistan" (Ashgate Publishing, 2003).
He has contributed op-ed pieces on national security issues to Asia Times (Hong Kong), The News Sentinel (Fort Wayne, Indiana), Journal Star (Peoria, Illinois), The Contra Costa Times (Danville, California), The Friday Times (Lahore, Pakistan), The San Francisco Chronicle, The San Jose Mercury, The News on Sunday (Karachi, Pakistan), The Nation (Lahore, Pakistan), Pakistan Link, Pakistan Today, The Weekly Independent (Lahore, Pakistan) and Wisconsin State Journal.
His research on energy problems facing India and Pakistan has been published in Asian Profile, Energy Policy, Power Economics and Utilities Policy. He is a consultant to electric utilities in North America and abroad, and has co-edited three books and more than 100 articles dealing with electricity planning, marketing, and management. His most recent book dealing with energy issues is called "Electricity Pricing in Transition" (Kluwer Academic Publishing, 2002).
He holds B. A. and M. A. degrees in economics from the University of Karachi, where he was awarded the Rashid Minhas (Shaheed) Gold Medal, and a Ph. D. in economics from the University of California, Davis, where he was a Regents Fellow. He has taught economics at the University of California - Davis, San Jose State University, and Karachi University and lectured on national security issues at the Army War College, Naval Postgraduate School, Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley. He belongs to the American Economics Association, the Association of Energy Service Professionals, Economists for Peace and Security, Nature Conservancy and the Sierra Club.
Monday morning quarterbacks always have a 100.00 rating.
A bleating leftist!!!
Economists for Peace and Security. One of the founding trustees of EPS is John Kenneth Galbraith.
In other words, he's the brains and mouthpiece for a leftist think tank.
Naw. Some, like Zinni still botch it up. We clearly were able to successfully invade Iraq with less than a half million soldiers, and his idea of turning Iraq over to militias is awful. It's not like Germany that had a professional gentleman's army to fall back on once we got the SS nuts out of the picture - Iraq was a collection of thugs for a couple of generations.
The Turkish Government's scorched-earth policy has destroyed thousands of Kurdish villages producing more than two million civilian refugees. Now they threaten to destabilize northern Iraq where a de facto independent Kurdish state thrives.
The Turks have done the same wherever they have slithered including to the millions of the original inhabitants of anatolia - Christians who were destroyed under Muslim Turk rule.
Turkey has always supported state sponsored terror against its non muslim minorities.
The sooner this remnant of Asiatic aggression is divied up and the land given back to its original inhabitants/owners the better.
The Zinni analysis is not new or novel, just consistent proof that hindsight can make even a fool seem wise.
"The third blunder was the failure to hold a surrender ceremony in Baghdad. He said the US should have brought some senior Iraqi figures for a well-publicised ceremony signalling the end of Baathist oppression. The failure to create such a momentum moment would prove disastrous in the months to c..."
Huh? There was nobody who would surrender .. they just fled. Besides, that 'moment' was April 10, 2003, when the Saddam statue fell .. THAT was the moment, when Iraqis were hitting shoes on Saddams bronze head, that defined the end of the Saddam regime... they were in hiding afterwards.
A lot of the Zinni commentary is similarly lame...
"The fourth blunder was to take a phased approach to the campaign, with the first phase being the overthrow of Saddams regime and the second phase being reconstruction. In Zinnis opinion, the war and reconstruction activities should have been carried out in parallel."
Reconstruction work was beginning as early as April 2003!!!
Who is he kidding here? We were having military folks hand out care packages within days of fighting in the south of Iraq.
Maybe disbanding the Iraqi army was a 'blunder' but in fact, the entire army has *melted away and gone home!!* and the US forces were not in any position to *draft* the conscript army to come back again! So the complaint sounds good, but misses some complications that makes it not so simple as he sounds.
etc.
Alot of great second-guessing and 20/20 hindsight that proves little. In the end, we liberated Iraq and did a very good thing, and despite what history may judge as mistakes or not, the balance is one where we and Iraqi are and will be better for the liberation of Iraq.
IF WE WANT TO MAKE OUR EFFORT SUCCEED, WE WILL SUCCEED.
IF WE WANT TO MAKE IT FAIL, WE WILL FAIL.
The difference is our will, our determination, our tenacity, our courage, and our patience.
If we persevere, we will have victory.
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