Read my op/ed in tomorrow’s Washington Post.
I wrote this originally during my trip to Baghdad in January. It was even more “optimistic” then than the current version, which will strike many as still too rosy-eyed. What I did not see in January was the enormous gap that has opened up between Iraq’s politicians and its people. The politicians were happy with the “national partnership” government, but the people were not seeing anything change in their too real lives.
Maliki seems to have understood this, after the demonstrations. We’ll see how effective he is at getting some results.
I do think there are upsides for the United States if a more or less democratic Iraq can come out of this mess a high-volume oil (and maybe gas) producer that exports to the north and west as well as through the Gulf. That’s not neo neo conservatism. It’s just realism. No need anyway for Iraq to be a model any longer–the Arab countries seem to be in a race to produce democracies left and right. Let’s hope they succeed at least as well as Iraq.
The Israelis are the victors for now. With authority comes responsibility. They need to make…
Only people can force the P5 leaders to undertake the way out of the catastrophic…
A lot of people could get killed in a peace operation of this difficulty. The…
Trump's America is a place where freedom of speech is in doubt, right-wing violence is…
The Trump Administration's 20-point peace plan for Gaza calls for the unconditional surrender, disarmament and…
They can and sometimes do, provided they organize well and rely on expertise to develop…