No Substitute for Victory

After all the Democratic pressure for a new National Intelligence Estimate of the situation in Iraq, the Democrats themselves seem to be the most shaken by the report’s conclusion–that withdrawal “of coalition forces from Iraq would ‘almost certainly’ increase sectarian violence, intensify Sunni resistance, possibly cause the Iraqi Security Forces to dissolve and allow al-Qaeda to seek a sanctuary to plan attacks inside and outside the country.” Senator Russel Feingold, who has been at the forefront of the push to withdraw American troops, complained that the NIE was “Setting up a false choice between indefinite military involvement and a rapid, unplanned withdrawal . . .” Feingold’s alternative to rapid a rapid withdrawal of American troops: “Framing the analysis in terms of ‘rapid withdrawal, presented an oversimplified assessment of one course of action without considering any elements of a redeployment strategy, including shifts in mission, stay-behind counterterrorism or training capabilities or regional diplomatic initiatives.” That sounds an awful lot like rapid withdrawal, and this despite the fact that Bush’s new strategy appears to be having some effect on the violence in Iraq. From the AP:

The number of Iraqi civilians killed in Baghdad’s sectarian violence fell drastically overnight, an Iraqi military official said Friday, crediting the joint U.S.-Iraqi security operation that began in force just days ago.

Iraqi army Brig. Gen. Qassim Moussawi, a spokesman for the Baghdad commander, said only 10 bodies had been reported by the morgue in the capital, compared to an average of 40 to 50 per day.
“This shows a big reduction in terror and killing operations in Baghdad,” he said on Iraqi state television.

And from Reuters:

U.S. Major Steven Lamb, a spokesman for U.S. forces stationed in Baghdad, said the offensive was meeting little resistance from militias and insurgents.
“I wouldn’t say there has been a high level of resistance. I mean if you take a look at the stuff that was going on yesterday, we had relatively few incidents, but that may change today,” Lamb said.
“It’s really too early to say if this is going to be a success or … failure. But so far everyone is very pleased.”

But the Democrats are doing everything they can to hamstring the troops. An editorial in today’s Washington Times quotes Rep. John Murtha on the Democrat’s plan “to effectively stop the troops in their tracks.”

“They won’t be able to continue. They won’t be able to do the deployment. They won’t have the equipment, they don’t have the training and they won’t be able to do the work. There’s no question in my mind,” Mr. Murtha said.

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