Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Alternate Worlds

Today's Washington Post offers a schizophrenic view of American policy in Iraq. One one hand, we have the decider insisting that he is succeeding:

In his address to the American Legion, Bush hailed what he said were indications of progress in his troop-surge policy.

"There's no question it's violent," he said, "but there are encouraging signs." When Americans see "the wanton destruction of innocent life" in Iraq, they wonder "whether or not it is possible to succeed," Bush said. "I understand that. But I also understand the mentality of an enemy that is trying to achieve a victory over us by causing us to lose our will." He said that "slowly but surely, these extremists are being brought to justice by Iraqis with our help."

On the other hand, here are the troops at the tip of the spear:

No, there have been no problems, the police commander was telling the armor-laden American soldiers squeezed into his office in the vast Shiite enclave of Sadr City. Except, he said, for the text-messaged death threats he often received from militia members.

Suddenly the meeting was interrupted by a loud mortar blast, followed by another explosion. A third, thunderous boom rattled the room, sending ripples through the yellow curtains and bringing the U.S. soldiers to their feet. [...]

But soldiers with a U.S. military police unit that has provided police training and patrols in Sadr City for most of the past 10 months said the Mahdi Army disrupts their efforts every day. Most of the Iraqi police they train are either affiliated with the militia or intimidated by it, the soldiers said. At worst, they said, militia infiltration in the police might be behind attacks on Americans, even though Iraqi officials offered assurances that the Mahdi Army was lying low.

"I don't really think there is an end or a beginning. I think it's all intermingled," Staff Sgt. Toby Hansen, 30, said about the Mahdi Army's relationship to the police trained by his unit. "Eventually, when we leave, they're going to police their own city. They're going to do it their way." [...]

The soldiers said they do not know which police officers are involved with the Mahdi Army. Their Iraqi interpreters, who also serve as cultural barometers, tell the soldiers that all the police officers are.

"That's why they're still alive," said interpreter "Adam" Abdul Kareem, 29, who uses a false first name and covers his face to conceal his identity while working.

Outside, the U.S. soldiers asked some policemen to accompany them on a patrol. The Iraqis initially refused, saying they would be kidnapped by the Mahdi Army if seen with the Americans. Mixon insisted. So they tagged along in a beat-up SUV -- placed second in the convoy, Hansen explained, so they could not lead the Americans into a trap. [...]


Staff Sgt. Jesse Benskin, 24, fumed. The car bomb, he said, was the work of Mahdi militiamen fed information by Iraqis at the station. Benskin said they all made phone calls right after the blast, which he read as a sign they were reporting results to the attackers. "In my opinion, they're not really holding back," Benskin said of the Mahdi Army.

"I see a whole lot of money and a whole lot of American lives on the line," he said. "Two weeks after we leave, it's going to go back to the way it was."

Two sides of a deadly coin.

Bonus Question

Do you really think this quote says what the reporter says it means?

"We need to bring a bunch of troops into Sadr and [expletive] this place up," said Spec. Josh Saykally, 25, of Minocqua, Wis., meaning soldiers should be living in the center of the district, not just on the edge.

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1 Comments:

Blogger The Minstrel Boy said...

mcCain yesterday said he would take the same walk without the protection detail. there's not a ground commander in the world that would allow him to do that. he knows this. there's also not a camera crew in the world that would go to film his lunacy.

8:15 AM  

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