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Born at the Crest of the Empire

Sunday, February 04, 2007

"Going for broke" in Iraq unlikely to work.

The article of the day is this WaPo piece
The success of the Bush administration's new Iraq strategy depends on a series of rapid and dramatic political and economic reforms that even the plan's authors have little confidence will work.

It does outline the political/economic side of the strategy a bit.
The strategy's political component centers on replacing deepening Sunni-Shiite-Kurdish divides with a new delineation between "extremists" and "moderates." Moderates are defined as those of all religious and political persuasions who eschew violence in favor of safety and employment.

With the help of outside Iraq experts, the administration has compiled lists of active and still-untapped moderates around the country.....


As American and Iraqi combat forces focus on cooling the cauldron of violence in Baghdad, U.S. military commanders and State Department teams plan to funnel "bridge money" toward moderate designees in outer provinces and in the capital to create jobs, start businesses and revitalize moribund factories. Iraqi money would come in behind to make it all permanent.

Iraqis with physical and economic security, the thinking goes, will give their political support to the government that produces both. Closing the circle, the Iraqi government will see non-sectarian moderates as the central support for a new political coalition.


So, the plan is to try to create rival money flows emphasizing "moderates" to compete with the patronage corruption through which the Shia militias draw so much of their money out of the current government. The idea is that somehow this will empower those moderates enabling a "Hadley memo" moderate center.

(But make a note that little to no real effort is being made to disrupt the militias' money flows.)

I think the skewering comment is this.
Many experts believe that the administration's effort to build a new political center, supported by "moderate" Sunni allies in the region that fear Shiite Iranian expansion, such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, is hopelessly outdated. "Our struggle may be between moderates and extremists," Brookings Institution scholar Martin Indyk said last month. "Their struggle is between Sunnis and Shias."

American troops are being risked for this. A program that even the authors don't really think is going to work.

2 Comments:

  • "Economic reforms." Sounds like bribes to me.

    I've never seen a group of people so devoted to greed. Wealth, power. More, more...It's like their God.

    By Blogger -epm, at 4:19 PM  

  • Oh, I definitely think they are bribes.

    I think the plan is to try to give the moderates a little organizing money so that they can compete against the militia/insurgents who own the ministries and receive foreign and criminal money.

    It won't work, but that seems to be the plan.

    Very similar to the efforts to "support democracy" in eastern europe and elsewhere, but the situation is so different.

    This is a desperation ploy.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 4:27 PM  

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