WHAT’S GOING ON IN ALL
WHAT’S GOING ON IN ALL OF IRAQ?: OxBlog’s David Adesnik links to a Washington Post story demonstrating the relatively high degree of cooperation between the U.S. military, Shiite clerics, and a reconstituted civilian authority in Karbala. Adesnik’s conclusions: The first is that American soldiers are more dependable than American diplomats when its comes to putting ...
WHAT'S GOING ON IN ALL OF IRAQ?: OxBlog's David Adesnik links to a Washington Post story demonstrating the relatively high degree of cooperation between the U.S. military, Shiite clerics, and a reconstituted civilian authority in Karbala. Adesnik's conclusions:
WHAT’S GOING ON IN ALL OF IRAQ?: OxBlog’s David Adesnik links to a Washington Post story demonstrating the relatively high degree of cooperation between the U.S. military, Shiite clerics, and a reconstituted civilian authority in Karbala. Adesnik’s conclusions:
The first is that American soldiers are more dependable than American diplomats when its comes to putting American values into practice. The second is that we should expect far more violent resistance to the occupation from Sunni Ba’athists than from Shi’ite opponents of Saddam…. This story belongs to a genre that is becoming increasingly familar: pragmatic US officer wins over suspicious locals. It’s already happened in Mosul and Kirkuk.
These reports, combined with Mark Steyn’s lovely travelogue, leads one to wonder if the coverage of Iraq now suffers from capital captivity. Coverage of Baghdad — where things are clearly problematic — is generalized to the rest of the country. Such a generalization may apply to Sunni strongholds like Fallujah and Tikrit, but not the vast majority of the country.
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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