Resurgent
by digby
I know that The Man Called Petraeus has single handedly won the war in Iraq and brought paece in the middle east and all, but there does seem to be a teeny tiny little problem.
Here’s Spencer Ackerman:
Suicide bombings in Iraq: not actually over. The last two weeks there’s been something approaching a bombing every two or three days. And they’re not where U.S. forces are spread the thinnest, but where they’re in full effect — Diyala and Baghdad. The Post reports the trend line for suicide bombings has been upward for the past two months. Happy 2008, year of the de-surge.
Over the past several months, surgenik euphoria has gotten out of control. War supporters all but declared victory as soon as 2007 ended. “We are now winning the war,” writes new NYT columnist Bill Kristol in the current Weekly Standard. “We at the Weekly Standard thought the chances of success were better than 50-50 — but that it remained a difficult proposition. Petraeus pulled it off.” Leave aside for a moment the question of Kristol’s cynicism and presume his sincerity. What this account neglects (as an understatement) is that every single time U.S. forces have shifted their tactics and pushed the insurgencies back — the capture of Fallujah, the death of Zarqawi, the capture and the execution of Saddam Hussein, Operation Together Forward I, Operation Together Forward II, etc. — the insurgency and al-Qaeda have watched, adjusted, adapted, and responded. Every company commander in Iraq knows this. Every NCO in Iraq knows this. Every soldier, Marine, airman, sailor, coastguardsman and civilian (maybe not all) in Iraq knows this. To get jargony, what happened this year is that Petraeus got all up in their OODA loop, which makes him the first U.S. commander to have done so. But there was never any reason to believe that would be permanent — hence the reason why Gaskin is the only general ever to have used that word in public. The suicide bombings are an indication that the insurgent groups and al-Qaeda in Iraq are shifting their loop up. Now it becomes a question of U.S. counterresponse, shaped by available capabilities. But we’ve passed the high-water mark of U.S. capabilities: the surge brigades will be gone by the spring-summer, owing to the unyielding reality of military overstretch, and Secretary Gates has spoken of bringing 40,000 troops total home by July. Continuing the current strategy will require doing way more with significantly less. For an example of what happens when troops are asked to do that, read this.
One hopes the candidates haven’t gotten too rusty on the issue of Iraq because it’s going to be an issue whether they like it or not.
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