Thursday, June 11, 2015

Filling the vacuum in a post-American world

Leftist with no core principles beyond a vague notion of a unicorns-and-rainbows- world, along with the libertarians with whom they are aligned on matters of foreign policy, like to think that the call for real American resolve and leadership in the face of grave dangers comes from some cabal of neocons exclusively.

Not so. As we send another 500 advisors into Iraq and conduct a bombing sortie here and there, the Mideast is poised for a regional war with global implications:

“The conditions are very much like 1914,” says Michael Stephens of the Royal United Service Institute in London. “All it will take is one little spark, and Iran and Saudi Arabia will go at each other, believing they are fighting a defensive war.” 
Hiwa Osman, an Iraqi Kurdish commentator, was even more blunt: “The whole region is braced for the big war, the war that has not yet happened, the Shiite-Sunni war.” 
U.S. and foreign experts say the U.S still has not developed a strategy for dealing with the Sunni extremists who now hold more territory Iraq and Syria than one year ago. President Barack Obama on Monday acknowledged that the U.S. strategy in Iraq was a work in progress. “We don’t have, yet, a complete strategy, because it requires commitments on the part of Iraqis as well,” Obama said at the close of the G-7 summit in Germany. “The details are not worked out.”
The experts criticize America’s detachment from the four wars now under way in the region. And they say the Obama administration is banking on Iran to stabilize the region, a very dubious course.
Here are some more experts.  You don't see a neocon name among them:

“We really don’t have a strategy at all. We’re basically playing this day by day,” Robert Gates, a former secretary of defense, told MSNBC last month.
The one conflict where the U.S. has poured money, weapons and military advisers is Iraq, but the outlook after the Sunni city of Ramadi fell to the Sunni extremists is for a long, drawn-out conflict.
John Allen, the former retired Marine Corps general who serves as U.S. envoy to the global coalition fighting the Islamic State, told an audience in Qatar last week that it “will be a long campaign” and defeating its ideology will take “a generation or more.”
Allen laid out five areas for cooperation against the Islamic State – denying “safe haven” to its forces, disrupting the flow of foreign fighters, curbing access to foreign finances, providing humanitarian relief and responding to group’s propaganda.
But he made no mention of addressing the political causes that allowed the Islamic State to take root in Iraq – disaffection by Sunnis with their treatment by the Shiite-led central government.
“IS cannot be ended by Kurds, Shiites, Americans or Iran. It has to be done by Sunni Arabs,” said Osman. “You need to present them with a deal for the day after IS is defeated. And no one has managed to articulate that vision for them,” he said.
Conceivably, that would be a federal system that ends Shiite domination of the security services, but most importantly secures reconciliation with Baathists, members of the party that ruled Iraq under the late dictator Saddam Hussein. Baathists are said to comprise a great many of the top positions in the Islamic State military apparatus.
“I am extremely pessimistic” about the future of Iraq, said Toby Dodge, a leading scholar on Iraq who teaches at the London School of Economics. He said he doubted that Prime Minister Haider al Abadi, “a very decent man, a smart man,” could save Iraq. But “he’s hostage to his own constituency, radical Shiite Islamism. What he needs is to appeal to the disenfranchised Sunnis of the northwest.”
He said an Iraqi civil war “is almost unavoidable.”
Some Iraq scholars argue that the country can be saved. Decentralization of power, reconciliation with Baathists and other concessions that would motivate Sunnis to oust the Islamic State are “feasible, absolutely,” says Kenneth Pollack of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.
Some Iraq scholars argue that the country can be saved. Decentralization of power, reconciliation with Baathists and other concessions that would motivate Sunnis to oust the Islamic State are “feasible, absolutely,” says Kenneth Pollack of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.
But he said the administration is not making the effort.
“I believe it is negligence,” he said. “They continue to insist we can’t want this more than the Iraqis. . . . This is historical nonsense. If you leave it to the Iraqis, they won’t do the right thing even if they want to.”
The other big issue left out of Allen’s presentation was a strategy for Syria, where the Islamic State has its headquarters. Pro-Western rebel forces are willing to fight the Islamic State but insist on also taking on the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad, which has permitted the Islamic State to seize and hold territory, mostly without a fight.
Last week, when Islamic State forces advanced on the country’s biggest city, Aleppo, the regime bombed rebels, not Islamic State forces. In response to rebel pleas, the U.S. mounted one airstrike Sunday against the Islamic State, but it didn’t coordinate it with fighters on the ground. This has raised suspicions that U.S. won’t block the Islamic State from advancing on Aleppo.
“I just don’t think they care,” said Pollack.
Because the Most Equal Comrade is too busy employing executive-branch overreach and secrecy to set up an EU-style economic cooperation group around the Pacific rim that will erode American sovereignty and impose policies regarding such matters as immigration and the environment that will continue his hobbling of America's economic well-being.

Hey, I guess we all play to our strengths. Facing the stark realities just ain't a strength for the MEC.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/06/10/269371/mideasts-worst-case-a-big-war.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/06/10/269371/mideasts-worst-case-a-big-war.html#storylink=cpy

12 comments:

  1. "We overestimate our ability to shape events in the Middle East." --Robert Gates on Charlie Rose 5/18/2015

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  2. Core Principles vs. Core Principles, ahh, the story of humanity beneath a silent God....

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  3. If post-America does not resume its identity as the United States of America and exercise some actual leadership, one of three outcomes is certain: catastrophic threat to the West from Sunni jihad, catastrophic threat to the West from Iran, or a regional Sunni-Shiite conflagration that causes global economic chaos.

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  4. Again, as it has recently been stated by someone who was pretty high up and pretty knowledgeable about both administrations' handling of this situation. I know he says other crap too about this and other matters. US history does go in cycles. 40 year cycles. Hmm, let's do the math. Should be due for another Ronnie circa 2020. Will there be a year 5555, when man is still alive to survive? See https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Cycles_of_American_History.html?id=0uz1reaKenQC&hl=en

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  5. Oh, shit, now we're trotting out Schlessinger. Cycles, schmycles. What are you saying? That because we are at a given point in the "cycle" we are to just sit on our hands and be conquered and / or incinerated?

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  6. Haven't we been there, done that, with nothing really to show for it, since 2001? Just tryin' to give you hope for a return to what really is your real America you so pine for. Then we sold arms to Iran to arm men at war elsewhere, with real guns, killing people, again, to no real lasting effect. I ain't buyin' your desparation, nor is the majority of the electorate here. See you in the cinder pile, but, until then, maybe at the City Market.

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  7. Yep, Schlessinger and Bob Gates. Pretty knowledgeable and experienced gentlemen,. Yes indeed, I am indeed trotting them out. Your post-America line is wearing on me.

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  8. This is post-America. A political party - the Democrats. who hate basic human freedom and have for decades - has its grip on the nation's throat. From the EPA to the IRS to the foreign-policy function to socialist health care to the attempt to mandate urban diversity by executive fiat to unprecedented debt, it is clear that we are dealing with an entire party that hates the basic principles that characterize America. These are people who think America has been a little too big for its britches for at least the last century and needs to be taken down a peg. They will impose a slave mentality on the part of the populace and / or get us all murdered in our beds.

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  9. Gawd, must suck to have your high blood pressure. This is no way to treat it. Chill, dude, at least sometimes. All is indeed one, despite your putting us down as rainbowers and lollipoppers. Try to be a bit Quaker sometimes, it may work wonders.

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  11. Well, can we be sucessful wanting what YOU want more than the Iraqis? I won't call it just "your ilk," but there seems to be a strong strain of humanity wanting stuff more than other humans do and then they make it happen. Does that really work? If it does, I haven't seen it apply to any war we've been in during my lifetime. I have sat and listened to torn up vets for nearly half a century and they still come home torn up today. For what? A people that doesn't want their bravery, sacrifice and heroism? Thank you for serving, Thank you for your service. Blah blah blah......

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