Posted on 07/19/2006 1:19:56 PM PDT by SmithL
Washington -- The Bush administration's notion that toppling Saddam Hussein would stabilize a turbulent region is among the casualties of this week's Middle East carnage.
The death toll in Lebanon and Israel, which exceeds 250 in the past week, is a grim reminder that the sectarian violence in Baghdad 500 miles to the east is but one of many hotspots in a region that has been plagued by violence for more than 1,000 years.
The oft-stated hope that a new Iraqi government would swiftly transform the region's fractured politics has been realized with unintended consequences: an emboldened Iran; the victory of Hamas in Palestinian elections; and Syria's departure from Lebanon. The familiar strain has been hatred between the Arabs and Israelis and a widely held assumption that the situation will grow worse before it improves.
"Unless and until you solve the Arab-Israel conflict, you are going to have instability in the region,'' said Steven Cook, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.
Some scholars view the situation from the opposite direction. Coit Blacker, director of Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford, believes that "there is no answer to the Arab-Israel conflict until the nature of politics within the region changes substantially.''
Yet there is wide agreement that more than three years after attacking Iraq, the administration's mission to build a democracy that would foster stability -- the most often cited reason to go to war after ridding Hussein of his weapons of mass destruction -- is a long way from being accomplished.
"Partly as a result of what's happening in Iraq, the whole region seems to be separating along sectarian lines,'' said Michael Sterner, former U.S. ambassador to the United Arab Emirates and an assistant secretary of state under President Jimmy Carter.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
The dems have put all their eggs in the losing basket.
Vomit........ack!
But this guy thinks Bush should have it all solved in four years, eh?
And I guess he fails to notice how almost all the Arab states have told the Palis and Hizbollah to go pound sand - that alone is a sea change in Middle East politics.
The fact that the SFComicle and the Carter Administration are squawking tells me that this is going exactly right.
Dude this is a triple barf alert. A 7 year old special ed kid could write a more coherent and convincing analysis.
I sometimes wonder if Saddam was the only one that realized the Shiites were maniacs and killing them scared the beejesus out of Iran.
I think they don't understand Bush's vision. Freedom and democracy cannot coexist with extremists who believe everyone should do things their way or DIE.
"And I guess he fails to notice how almost all the Arab states have told the Palis and Hizbollah to go pound sand - that alone is a sea change in Middle East politics."
If our media were impartial, that whould be the headline but it isn't even in the story.
Where was this oft-stated except as some lefty straw man? I don't recall Bush ever saying change would be rapid. In fact, I recall him saying change would take quite a long time so we best be getting to it now.
At least the Israelis don't have to worry about Iraqi Scuds this time around. All the easier for them to take out the local trash.
Ahem. Not to disturb the little reporters tiny brain, but aren't we lucky that Saddam is out of power and can't launch scuds at Israel like he did in '91? Not that facts matter to most reporters or anything.
The fact that Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt want Hezbollah crushed didn't seem to make it into this analysis. Gee, maybe the SF Chronicle should finance a trip by Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton to broker a peace with Hezbollah, Syria and Iran. As I remember those two dimwits vision of the mideast came out just as they expected it to. Save me from SF morons.
A little help, is there an election coming up soon?
Ah the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies has weighed in on the subject. No further discussion needed.
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