> gg wrote:
>  It is true that I partially supported it when it was sold as a
>  necessity based on intelligence.  That is no longer the case.
>

Bill Maher says it better:
--------
Conservatives, and especially the neo-cons, got this sentimental idea
into their heads that all Iraq needed was a taste of American-style
freedom and all would be well. They thought, "Sunnis, Shiites--forget
all that. Once these people get a load of us and what we're offering,
they'll come drifting out of their homes wiping away tears of
gratitude and welcome a new post-Saddam era of democracy." It was a
grand plan: creating a new, oil-rich, democratic ally in the Middle
East. Too bad it was based more on naïve, fairytale wishes than on any
semblance of practical reality.

It's like the new bride marrying into a violently conflicted,
dysfunctional family thinking, "Once they're exposed to my values and
a little of my TLC, they'll all see the light and get along." No,
sorry, some problems run much deeper than feel-good, better-way
solutions.

We're seeing it in Iraq's latest security problems. Shiites are
fighting Sunnis, Sunnis are fighting al Qaeda, Shiites are fighting
Shiites and we're operating on a broad policy based on some imagined,
unified Iraqi military "standing up." As President Bush said in a news
conference last June, "Our policy is stand up/stand down; as the
Iraqis stand up, we'll stand down." Well, they are standing up, but
not as one, cohesive, nationalistic, pro-democracy army. They're
standing up as separate warring enclaves bent on destroying each
other.

The Iraqi government just had to purge 1,300 soldiers and policemen
from their security ranks, some of them senior officers like
lieutenant colonels and brigadier generals, because they either
refused to fight or switched sides during the recent conflict in
Basra. It's lovely to imagine a unified Iraqi army "standing up," but
when the lead starts flying, old tribal loyalties supersede allegiance
to the new occupier-endorsed command.

Isn't it time to realize that this marriage isn't working out? As the
new bride, we've tried to goad, to entice and to shame our new in-laws
into behaving according to our ideals. But our presence isn't so much
resolving conflict as it is postponing it. Sometimes divorce isn't a
surrender or a defeat; it's a simple recognition that the whole idea
was a mistake in the first place.

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