September 22, 2009 11:08 AM

The President-Elect's Opportunity In Iraq

By
CBSNews
(National Review Online)  This column was written by The Editors of National Review Online.
Iraq's cabinet approved a security pact to keep U.S. troops in the country another three years. The agreement goes now to the parliament, where it seems likely to win approval.

The United Nations mandate under which American troops were operating lapses at the end of the year. If we hadn't reached an agreement with the Iraqis, our troops no longer would have been able to operate in the country. The negotiations were long, complex, and highly controversial within Iraq. That they were successfully concluded is a blow to the schemers in Iran - and to their cat's-paw, Moqtada al-Sadr - who did all they could to torpedo the pact.

The Iranians ran a substantial propaganda campaign in Iraq against the agreement beginning in May of this year. They lobbied Iraqi politicians and offered them bribes. The Iranians don't like having us at their doorstep and don't like the version of Iraq - an ally of the United States - that our continued presence implies. Iran's implicit threat to Maliki was that his government would fall if he supported the agreement.

That Maliki has defied Iran is another sign of his growing confidence following successful operations to clear Sadr's Mahdi Army out of Basra and Sadr City. Sadr had launched protests against the agreement with the goal of ending the U.S. "occupation" of Iraq. The pact demonstrates again his waning power. Grand Aytollah al-Sistani blessed the agreement, pointedly siding with the elected Iraqi government.

Maliki drove a tough bargain with us, and the agreement is far from ideal. We protected our troops from falling under the jurisdiction of Iraqi law, but we didn't protect contractors. And we gave in to two ill-advised hard deadlines.

U.S. troops are scheduled to cease combat operations in Iraqi cities by June 2009. This kind of deadline is unwelcome, since conditions can change, but at the moment it looks as though it may be practical. We are only conducting major combat operations in Mosul right now, and central Iraq is mostly quiet, so we have already effectively been shifting to peacekeeping operations.

The agreement also calls for all U.S. forces to be out of Iraq by the end of 2011, another unconditional deadline. But there's nothing keeping a future Iraqi government from negotiating a new pact with the U.S. that is less categorical.

Declining levels of violence are going to tempt both American and Iraqi politicians to opt for a too-rapid deadline. They should be looking around the corner to elections next year that could occasion more violence. First, there are the provincial elections in January, which will be very contentious in Ninewa province, where the Kurds and Sunnis are jockeying for control, and in Basra, where various Shia factions are at daggers drawn. Then, there are national elections, probably in the fall of 2009. It is extremely important that these elections succeed and our troops remain Iraq's most capable and neutral arbiter.

We hope Barack Obama pays heed. He has been handed an extraordinary opportunity. Few would have thought when President Bush ordered the surge two years ago that there would have been such extensive security gains and that a sovereign Iraqi government - albeit flawed and fragile - would be in a position to begin taking control of its own destiny. Obama will have the chance to preside over a successful endgame in Iraq. This is the gift the surge has given him, if he doesn't throw it away.
By The Editors of National Review Online
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online

National Review Online
Add a Comment
by dmgenet November 20, 2008 11:04 PM EST
"Successful endgame in Iraq"? Oh brother! NRO waxes asinine again and again. Any kindergartner knows that when you make a mess you are expected to clean it up. GW Bush made a mess and it only took him 6 long years (that''s a heck of a slow learning curve) to clean up HIS mess. No kudos to Bush. And nothing is being handed to Obama. Nothing. Talk about empty praise...
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by sanfelz November 20, 2008 10:36 PM EST
Very nice of NRO to give advice to Obama. Maybe the editors of the NRO and other Bush apologists can fly onto an aircraft carrier and declare "Mission Accomplished". There they can revel in their victories in Iraq and the 2008 presidential and senatorial elections.
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by dubya_luvr November 20, 2008 4:35 PM EST
At this stage, I think NRO, its followers and editors need to heed Bill O''Reilly''s advice and SHUT UP.

Obama does NOT need advice from loser neocons who have produced nothing but division and lies from day one.

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by omnibus66 November 20, 2008 11:31 AM EST
Assess the situation as it currently exists in Iraq and then use use those conditions as a definition of victory. Then we can bring the troops home and everyone will be happy.

Everyone, that is, except the family and friends of those killed, maimed, or mentally screwed up by participating in this obscene waste of humanity and resources.

Don''t worry about George Bush''s legacy. His well deserved legacy will be to spend eternity in Hell.
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by allzwell November 20, 2008 1:28 AM EST
I''ll bet ya dollars to doughnuts... Iraq explodes into Lucifer''s hammer with our troops as the anvil. No matter what you delusional warmongers think, 90% of non-filthy-rich Iraqi''s want our a$$es out of there yesterday. Just think... who would you accept as an invading occupier for America, and for how long would you put up with it? As dismissive as some are around here of other people and cultures that are not American, a lot of other countries feel just as patriotic and fanatically protective of their country as we are of ours, if not more so as we have seen. We would not stand for that kind of bulls**t in America for a nanosecond, so how can you expect any other country to endure it for years? We''ve deliberately and methodically turned their country into hell on earth and expect them to thank us for it... I just don''t see the logic in that train of thought. Just let them be... leave them alone... they''re tired of all the killing we''ve brought them and probably feel by now that Saddam was a blessing compared to us. Let''s just BUY their freaking oil! It''s gotta be cheaper than our souls that we''re selling.
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by jjmurray9889 November 19, 2008 6:19 PM EST
"We hope Barack Obama pays heed. He has been handed an extraordinary opportunity. Few would have thought when President Bush ordered the surge two years ago that there would have been such extensive security gains and that a sovereign Iraqi government"
Puhlease!! There were a lot of us who supported the surge and were confident it would produce results. Once of those people was George W. Bush...but I guess pointing that out would mean you have to admit he was right on something. heaven forbid you would do that!
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