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Getting comfortable with being stuck, Yousef Munayyer 12-15-2005 Special to AAF
Before the war the ideal solution for Iraq would have been a popular revolution
to remove a corrupt regime and establish a democratically elected government
that would act on the will of its people. The reality is far from the ideal.
There was an American invasion that led to the toppling of the regime and has
been received by a stiff Iraqi resistance. The situation now is critical. The
United States cannot win but cannot afford to loose in Iraq. We need to get
comfortable with this because the status quo will not change any time soon.
When asked what they would like to see happen many may say they want an
immediate withdrawal of American forces from the country. There can be nothing
further from American and Iraqi interests than that. US Forces must remain in
Iraq because the cost of the alternative is much greater for Iraqis and
Americans alike.
Let us be clear. I do not like the fact that foreign troops are on Iraqi soil.
However Iraq is creation of colonialism and the interests of multiple western
powers and was unnaturally forged into creation by these interests. If US forces
leave now, as many people are hoping for, there will be chaos in Iraq. Stability
is necessary and is in the interest of the entire world. With constant bloodshed
and upheaval in Iraq and increasingly hostile rhetoric from neighboring Iran an
American withdrawal anytime soon could spell disaster for the region. At the
same time America is paying the price in Iraq. It is possible that even after 10
years of an American presence in Iraq that the situation would deteriorate into
civil war. This is a risk that the US has no choice but to take.
If you ever go into a china shop and break an item unintentionally you will have
to pay for that item. The US has broke Iraq. We can argue for days about how
well it had been stuck together, or whether it was broke unintentionally but
this is now irrelevant to the withdrawal debate. Those who are talking about
withdrawal now are doing so with political intentions to take down the President
of the United States. While the President certainly erred in leading the nation
into this war of choice, and should be held accountable for this by the American
people, a withdrawal any time soon is not the answer. This game is political. It
is so political in fact that any Democrat elected for the highest office in this
nation will have no choice but to maintain an American presence in Iraq.
The real battle for democracy is here in the United States. In our system, which
is supposed to be transparent, accountability is necessary for operating under
principles of justice. We have acquired a burden that we otherwise should not
have to deal with. We have a liability no that is costing us lives and leaving
will cost us more in the future.
To be perfectly clear if this war was not about oil at its inception it
certainly is now. The instability in the region has driven the price of oil to
new heights. The outlook for the oil market suggests high prices for as long as
the future of Iraq is unclear so the US simply cannot afford to leave.
When the President says “we must stay the course” he is right. Leaving Iraq any
time soon would cause the fragile situation to shatter. The question Americans
need to ask is not whether we should stay the course. Rather we need to decide
who should be leading the way and those who have proven incapable should be held
accountable for their betrayal of public trust. Perhaps a new administration,
honest about American interests, would be a breath of fresh air to the Iraqi and
American people alike. If the Iraqis can see that American politicians are not
even being honest with the American people they will only continue to be
skeptical and suspicious about American policies abroad.
We have to get comfortable with the uncomfortable but at the same time analyze
why we have been steered into this catch-22. A new dictatorship in Iraq is not
the biggest failure; rather the biggest failure is constant instability into the
future. Should Iraq follow the paradigm of Afghanistan in the post-soviet era we
are in for very difficult times ahead. It took the Soviets a decade to leave
Afghanistan and the stakes in Iraq are much higher.
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