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Iraq
Why Iraq Has No Army
2005-11-10
An orderly exit from Iraq depends on the development of a viable Iraqi security force, but the Iraqis aren't even close. The Bush administration doesn't take the problem seriously—and it never has

by James Fallows
Long, long, pessimistic piece in The Atlantic. If Mr. Fallows is right, America is hopelessly screwed and it's all Bush's fault, of course.

0820 CST update: link fixed. Sorry.

Followup on comments: to be clear, I don't endorse anything Mr. Fallows says, and I'm well aware of his employment history. The Atlantic is a decent magazine, so when they allow someone like this to put up a big piece, it deserves attention.

What Mr. Fallows misses is a simple concept: success breeds success. He misses this because he was associated with Carter, I think. But as the Iraqi army and police start to have success (and they are already), it becomes easier for them to be successful in the future. Morale is better. Training becomes more focused. They learn from their mistakes. And very importantly, the bad guys have less to work with beause your successes tend to put them out of business (see Steve Den Beste's take on a similar situation, the intifada in Frankistan). So the Iraqi army and police have a long-term trend line that is upward.

Likewise, the political situation has a long-term trend line that is hopeful. They've managed to settle their political differences enough to get a constitution (imperfect but impressive) and are going to have a permanent government by January. That's huge. The terrs know this which is why they're going to go all out to try and stop the elections. The wheels can come off the political end easily, of course, but so far it's encouraging -- the Sunnis are getting a clue, the Shi'a are mostly behaving, and the Kurds understand that they can't go it alone.

What we have to do is get past the short term, and the sniping that's out there in Washington that's being done for political purposes. GWB seems to be the kind who will hold fast, but the rest of his party, I don't know.
Posted by:Steve White

#10  GP - I almost missed it last night, but Kurdistan had an ad in prime time in the DC area! I woke up from a commercial-enduced slumber to see "Kurdistan - The Other Iraq" and the end of a 30 second spot.

Posted by: Bobby   2005-11-10 21:59  

#9  Why does france have no army?
Posted by: Hupavique Pheanter1390   2005-11-10 20:44  

#8  What Mr. Fallows misses is a simple concept: success breeds success. He misses this because he was associated with Carter, I think.

Ouch!
Posted by: Mike   2005-11-10 12:51  

#7  Go here

Run the Thank you video [med for those with 512M memory otherwise small]. Then run The Other Iraq. Makes Mr. Fallows an idiot as he deserves to be labelled.
Posted by: Greregum Phomong6307   2005-11-10 09:51  

#6  The man obviously doesn't read the blogs out of Iraq, or he'd shut up already. The Americans are on the Syrian border, along the Euphrates, and in Baghdad because Iraq security forces have taken their place elsewhere. Even in those three remaining locations, all the ops I've read above company level were usually joint US-Iraq. The Iraq security forces are also the ones taking the higher casualties [just like the S.Korean army in the Korean War]. The man is a day late and a dollar short.
Posted by: Greregum Phomong6307   2005-11-10 08:59  

#5  I stopped reading his articles in the Atlantic because they are so predictable. He's an Ivy League version of the Greek who shall not be named.
Posted by: Uleatle Crasing4578   2005-11-10 08:35  

#4  Wasn't he one of those annoited scholars that claimed Reagan was going to destroy the world by confronting communism. Just nod and hopefully he wqill go away.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-11-10 08:23  

#3  He was a Carter speechwriter. That says a lot right there. Wrote one of those "we're all going to be eating udon and learning Kanji soon" books in '94 (really bad timing). Very ambitious. Grew up in Redlands when it was still a farm town and went to Harvard.

I always take his articles in the Atlantic with a big grain of salt. Always a lot of good information, but after it all gets processed through his brain, the conclusions always come out skewed or trivialized (as in a trivial solution to a math problem). In fact, I haven't even read the conclusion of his last few articles. More of a tool of the left elites than a leader or ideologist.
Posted by: 11A5S   2005-11-10 00:48  

#2  Back during the Cold War, James Fallows was against just about every major military system we have in place today. John Kerry must have voted against just about every bill funding the acquisition of these weapons systems on the basis of negative articles by Fallows. Fallows is a guy who has no credibility.
Posted by: Elmenter Snineque1852   2005-11-10 00:29  

#1  Link don't work. Here it is, if you got's a subscription.
Posted by: 11A5S   2005-11-10 00:21  

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