AN HONEST BRIEFING: Time has
AN HONEST BRIEFING: Time has an excellent account of one general’s assessment of how the war is proceeding. Two paragraphs worth reviewing: “The senior officer seemed to go a little bit off message on whether the U.S. needs Saddam dead or alive. (Briefers here have repeatedly said ‘this isn’t about one man’) He said, ‘The ...
AN HONEST BRIEFING: Time has an excellent account of one general's assessment of how the war is proceeding. Two paragraphs worth reviewing: "The senior officer seemed to go a little bit off message on whether the U.S. needs Saddam dead or alive. (Briefers here have repeatedly said 'this isn’t about one man') He said, 'The average Iraqi only knows Saddam. He's survived everything. He's won the lottery every time. He's a huge symbol for these people. He's everything. Unless we take him out, the population can't be confident.' According to the senior officer, an example of Saddam's desperation came today with the 3 rd ID at a bridge near Najaf when Republican Guard forces — he said he believed they were from the Nebuchadezzer Division — put women and children out in front of them and were shooting at U.S. forces from behind the cover of the civilians. When one woman tried to move aside, she was shot in the back and fell into the river (a U.S. solider apparently rescued her). 'The regime has inflicted more casualties on its own people in the last couple days than any errant bombs of ours.'" (emphasis added).
AN HONEST BRIEFING: Time has an excellent account of one general’s assessment of how the war is proceeding. Two paragraphs worth reviewing: “The senior officer seemed to go a little bit off message on whether the U.S. needs Saddam dead or alive. (Briefers here have repeatedly said ‘this isn’t about one man’) He said, ‘The average Iraqi only knows Saddam. He’s survived everything. He’s won the lottery every time. He’s a huge symbol for these people. He’s everything. Unless we take him out, the population can’t be confident.‘ According to the senior officer, an example of Saddam’s desperation came today with the 3 rd ID at a bridge near Najaf when Republican Guard forces — he said he believed they were from the Nebuchadezzer Division — put women and children out in front of them and were shooting at U.S. forces from behind the cover of the civilians. When one woman tried to move aside, she was shot in the back and fell into the river (a U.S. solider apparently rescued her). ‘The regime has inflicted more casualties on its own people in the last couple days than any errant bombs of ours.‘” (emphasis added).
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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